The prices of all kinds of used camera gear has gone way up in the past couple years, even doubled. What is driving this might be wishful thinking in terms of the sellers, and keeping up with the Jones' in that respect; but it is a conspicuous trend. And since it's affecting pro medium format gear even more than 35mm, and large format gear too, it can't merely be attributed to a transient consumer film fad. But what goes up must come down, once the inflated pricing strategy stops working.
I suspect certain people or dealers see wild fishing expedition prices on EBay, and then use that as their own basis when listing similar items. The higher the price, the more it tempts people to put up for sale their own equivalents. But then, "rare and collectible" ends up on a dozen of the same model of lens or camera in a row on the site listings, and that leads to more competition, and inevitably to lower pricing once again. These things go in cycles.
The prices of all kinds of used camera gear has gone way up in the past couple years, even doubled. What is driving this might be wishful thinking in terms of the sellers, and keeping up with the Jones' in that respect; but it is a conspicuous trend. And since it's affecting pro medium format gear even more than 35mm, and large format gear too, it can't merely be attributed to a transient consumer film fad. But what goes up must come down, once the inflated pricing strategy stops working.
and I was just thinking if you bought the camera 10 years ago and sell it now with appreciation you are on the hook to pay capital gain tax. Although that appreciation is actually just the money losing it's buying power. But the tax man still wants to rob you.
It's funny to see so many Pentax K1000's (a very nice camera) sell for well over $100, while Minolta SRT202's (a much better camera) go for $15. And that's just one example. There are still super deals out there.
Are there any collectors of "rare and valuable" disposable cardboard cameras out there?
... is the wild escalation of the prices of some of the classic cameras of the 1950s and 1960s.
from: https://pindelski.org/Photography/
I’ve been an avid reader of Pindelski’s blog for a while now. While he has been taking photographs for over 50 years, he’s mostly focused on digital photography and often praises its merits. I enjoy his posts when he talks about photography and photographers, but I’m curious to know if others here agree with his stance on the film movement and its consequences?
The one thing the nutty retro film movement has succeeded in accomplishing – and it’s not great photography – is the wild escalation of the prices of some of the classic cameras of the 1950s and 1960s. Quite why anyone would waste time processing film with its poor quality and great fragility compared to digital images beats me. Yeah, I know. And LPs sound better too, right? Uh huh. Just go easy on the funny cigarettes.
The Konica WaiWai should be. It has a 17mm f8 lens -- and a FLASH.
http://camera-wiki.org/wiki/Konica_WaiWai_Wide
Instead of re-using the camera, a lot of people use the 17mm lens -- fixed-focus, of course -- on OTHER cameras. This guy moved one to a Leica M
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=npj9ChfdZj4
The K1000 has been casually mentioned as a good "starter" camera so many times because it has been used in many schools for photography programs and has all the bases covered for what you need to learn to take pictures while also being capable of taking very good ones. So, in a sense, it deserves the hype. The older ones are also quite robust and fixable. In a sense, it's completely worth $200. You don't need another slr if you have one, not really, unless you actually need the features of more "advanced" ones (and no one actually needs those at this point in history).
It's funny to see so many Pentax K1000's (a very nice camera) sell for well over $100, while Minolta SRT202's (a much better camera) go for $15. And that's just one example. There are still super deals out there.
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?
We use cookies and similar technologies for the following purposes:
Do you accept cookies and these technologies?