My life is cluttered with cameras - Nikkormats and Nikkors (worth nothing on the used resale market just now, so I'm keeping them), Contax G1 kits, Rolleis, 1950s folders, a pair of Kodak Retinas with three lenses and odd bits I bought with the good intention of restoring the cameras, but what do you think? That's just the film gear. The digitals are under control, two D700s (I seem to buy in pairs) and a D90 we use for at home point and shoot work. D lenses galore. Filters, lens hoods, a few other other bits.
When I retired in 2012 I did a count and realized I had between 50 and 60 cameras. Shock horror. By selling on Ebay and donating some to friends and our local op shop (I'm very surprised the local op shop volunteers don't lock the door and hide in the back room when they see me coming up the street, I've donated so much odd stuff to them) I'm now down to about 20 - I no longer to stocktakes to keep my heart beat under strict control.
My favorite film cameras are the ones I use least nowadays - the Rolleis (two Ts, a 3.5E2 and a Rolleicord Vb) and my Contax G1 kit. The Nikkormats were my bread-and-butter cameras throughout my stock photo days, but now almost never get used. Sadly. When the urge hits I go out with no more than two lenses and three rolls of film and try to work to the strict rule of Quality Versus Quantity. With digital the opposite seems to apply, altho I'm trying to wear out the Delete button by being more selective with the images I keep and those I don't. In the (not so) good old days I shot 3-4 images of the same subject either for duplicates or to vary exposures. Now with digital I can post-process dozens of the same image in the time it took me to shoot the film sequence.
The Rolleis are the most fun to work with and most often used. The Contax G1s allow a more rarefied quality experience but slide film is now so expensive, so I use color neg or B&W. The Nikkormats still give out a satisfying "crump!" when I press the shutter button and many past memories come back. I use them with B&W film only, now and then.
All my cameras except the Rolleicord Vb were bought privately or from reputable shops. Ditto chemistry and paper. I used to look for secondhand and expired everything, but not now. I do buy in smaller lots than I used to, tho, from the one major supplier left in Melbourne who still has the stocks.
The costs of my photography I prefer to not think about. Fortunately, I have an understanding partner. When I'm gone, family members will get some of my equipment and the rest can be sold if it still holds any value or given to friends or charity shops. Film, darkroom chemistry and paper, well, let's not go there. Digital is cheaper, but time in my darkroom is good therapy for me, tho I now get bored with it much faster than I did before, having less time left in my life and not more time.
I've finally cured myself (I think) of the urge to acquire yet more photo gear on Ebay or other sites. Mostly by keeping only $5 in my Paypal account. Yes, I miss a good deal now and then, but I've found the thought of having to transfer money into my Paypal and waiting 3-5 days for the payment to hit the account, often gives me the second thoughts I need to nix the purchase in the first place. It's really a game I play with myself, but heck, it works. Is life not just a long series of compromises, after all?
If I had to bite the bullet and keep just one camera kit, I would... I don't know. I love all my gear for different reasons. Fortunately, I don't have to do this. Eventually the 'problem' won't bother me any more.
So what am I to make of all this?I don't know. Like so many other posters, I've written only random thoughts.
Threads like this are great fun to read and post to. Some of you take a light-hearted approach to writing about their cameras and photography, which I particularly enjoy.
It's good to read and laugh. More, please.