If only bought up on hasselblad's and Leica's.Just a few years late.
If only bought up on hasselblad's and Leica's.
Snooze you lose.
That whole scene is not for me. I want cameras to use to make images, and I'd like to get some of my grail cameras before they hit the stratosphere. I'm thinking the Bronica S system will be the next marque that I soon won't be able to afford. Vintage cameras have some strange market quirks - who would imagine that Nikon F models with a plain prism finder would outpace those with Photomic prisms? I mean, if the meter is dead, you can use a Photomic as easily as a plain F prism with a handheld meter?
So what are you targeting?
To expand, I don't really think of my preferences as collecting future rarities, it's more like excessively hoarding usable equipment. However, in retrospect we can identify some trends that influence demand. For example, in the 90s-00s, I feel nobody was very interested in 50mm MF lenses (especially for orphan mounts), or 3rd party prime MF lenses, compared to say AF zooms. Although a 50/1.4 was never completely cheap. The advent of mirrorless cameras and lens-adapting meant that now there is an additional user demand for such lenses, especially fast-ish lenses from wide angle to short tele, from the "must have out of focus blur" crowd.
There are likely examples of things underpriced compared to their use value. For ex, somebody mentioned 80s/90s plastic-clad SLRs. The Nikon N90/s is an extremely good camera that is nearly free at the moment. I get why a young person who grew up with digitals would want to go to the opposite end and get a manual film camera (like an FM2/FE2, OM-1, etc). Maybe at some point the AF film SLRs will see some demand (but always be cheaper than the F100). Another possible increase: as full-frame DSLRs and mirrorless become more common and affordable, demand for full-frame lenses, even non-pro-level, has probably increased and may continue.
Other examples: modern large format lenses are going for peanuts compared to what they once cost (normal plasmats like a Symmar, excepting collectibles or XL types). If more people took up large format, that could change, but sheet film and enlarging/scanning is enough of a pain that I don't think millennials in apartments will take it up casually. Darkroom equipment could increase over its nadir several years ago, but almost no darkroom stuff is "collectible." Some medium format system cameras are still moderate prices - more than 10 years ago, but less expensive than a Hasselblad or the late-model systems that were always pricey (Mamiya, Bronica RFs). Maybe people who again can't afford a Hasselblad will buy into Mamiya 645, just as they might have in the 1980s; maybe not.
Great analysis! Especially the first paragraph, which describes my situation - "Hoarder of usable equipment" describes me.
I've got to agree that large format is the bargain area, especially lenses and less elegant brands like Cambo and Graphic. Field cameras are very popular with Millennials - and a recent video from a popular content provider showed more than ten active makers of large format view cameras.
Andy
Large format is an area where:
(a) there's a lot of usable equipment cast off by professionals and studios, that hasn't been soaked up like Hasselblads. This mostly doesn't include field cameras, but 4x5 monorails, high quality lenses, and necessaries such as holders.
(b) a cottage maker or importer can actually make a usable camera or accessory. Especially true with 3D printing and with access to custom manufacturing. A small business can bring a 4x5 or 8x10 field camera to market, since the really mechanically complicated stuff is in the lens optics and shutter, and you don't have to build in complicated interlocks, etc. By contrast, the people who have tried to kickstarter a complete 35mm camera got in way over their heads - it's like saying you're going to crowd-fund Nikon's engineering department.
New makers of field cameras perhaps keep the price of old field cameras from getting too inflated; because there were not as many old field cameras to begin with, compared to studio monorails. Top end field cameras were always expensive and likely will continue to be, especially those from makers who have retired.
I'm not really worried about getting priced out of the market for user or collectible cameras, but about the continued viability of things that take a large infrastructure, like film and paper plants, processing labs, and some kinds of repair and parts. The film and lab situation seems to have stabilized, but I hope another hit to the economy doesn't set it back.
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