I own maybe a dozen different models of Nikons going back to the original F. These cameras were made from the 1960s to the 1990s. I seem to always be going back to my N2000. It's very small in size, and comes without the autofocus and autoexposure whistles and bells. Gee whiz, you hafta set the camera yourself. It uses eight AAA batteries and they last forever. I can keep it in the trunk of my car at all times and is always available when I drive by and see that great photo op. I'm having fun with it with my new (to me) Sigma 50mm f2.8 Macro lens. Another steal from KEH.
1 - Which camera do you have that you find yourself using a lot more than you ever expected, and what about it surprised you?
2 - What camera did you get that just hasn't worked out to be used as often as you planned, and why?
I'm sure many on here are guilty (as am I) of working with multiple cameras at any given time, particularly since film cameras are much more affordable than they once were. I have at times felt like a kid in a candy store picking up an item here and there, either because it has such impressive specs, or because it was just a decent deal and you might find a use for it some day.
Ultimately, you might find that the camera you had such high hopes for did not really suit you as you had expected, or conversely, that the one you just picked up because it was a good deal also turns out to work really well for you.
So my conversational questions are:
1 - Which camera do you have that you find yourself using a lot more than you ever expected, and what about it surprised you?
2 - What camera did you get that just hasn't worked out to be used as often as you planned, and why?
For me:
1 - The Balda Pontina (6x9 folder) shocked me with its color rendition and sharpness, and I am now finding it to be the first one I reach for, even over my Zeiss Ikontas, when I want a camera I can trust to give me a well exposed and sharp color image.
2 - My Yashica 12 TLR has not seen nearly the use I'd expected. It's a great camera, and takes a wonderful image, but it's also very bulky and difficult to see the shutter/aperture settings in dim light. Still, it gets first call when trying an oddball film for a test, and when I want to be sure focus is good when using limited depth of field.
2 - What camera did you get that just hasn't worked out to be used as often as you planned, and why?
35mm doesn't seem to have the detail I really crave in an image and so I hardly use it unless there's a natural disaster where my medium format would just be destroyed, so the last time I REALLY used the Canon 1V was during hurricane sandy because it was the only thing that would survive the heavy wind and rain... LOL
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