I guess this is the right place for this:
I feel very fortunate to have Found/Stumbled upon APUG. It happened at a great time. My first real experience with photography stated in about 1978, when two of my friends took a photo class at our high school...they had a pretty decent darkroom. I Suppose a lot of schools use to.
Born in 1960, I was exposed to all of the Great/Classic 35mm SLR of the day. Not that I owned an F2 back then, but a guy would see them everywhere. All of the other greats from that time frame were known to me via magazines and seeing pros with them at Auto Races and Rock Concerts. But life intervened and I lost touch with cameras for many years.
Fast forward to Now, and I am seeing those same cameras all over again, and can actually afford to own a few of them this time around. And I feel very fortunate about THAT as well.
The 35mm SLR from The Golden Years of film are still around, with enough parts cameras to keep the survivors in great shape. I am not sure how long this will last, but it will not be forever. Many of these cameras are 30-50 years old. What condition might they be in, in another 40 years.?
We are alive at a good time for this. These "things" have not been made in a long time, and repair techs are no longer trained in any Formal/Corporate manner. We have the techs that we have, and many of them are getting long in the tooth.
Not sure what brought this all on...I think it is the "What's Your Latest New Old Camera"" forum. It made me wonder, in 40 years, who will be buying my camera gear.? WILL anybody want to buy it, and will the stuff be repairable to any degree...will there be guys that Can/Know how to perform a competent CLA.?
I have always looked back and thought..."Man, I wish I had been alive then". Because of these film cameras, there is a chance, that someday, some young Guy/Gal might actually be envious of the time THAT I was alive in.
I feel very fortunate to have Found/Stumbled upon APUG. It happened at a great time. My first real experience with photography stated in about 1978, when two of my friends took a photo class at our high school...they had a pretty decent darkroom. I Suppose a lot of schools use to.
Born in 1960, I was exposed to all of the Great/Classic 35mm SLR of the day. Not that I owned an F2 back then, but a guy would see them everywhere. All of the other greats from that time frame were known to me via magazines and seeing pros with them at Auto Races and Rock Concerts. But life intervened and I lost touch with cameras for many years.
Fast forward to Now, and I am seeing those same cameras all over again, and can actually afford to own a few of them this time around. And I feel very fortunate about THAT as well.
The 35mm SLR from The Golden Years of film are still around, with enough parts cameras to keep the survivors in great shape. I am not sure how long this will last, but it will not be forever. Many of these cameras are 30-50 years old. What condition might they be in, in another 40 years.?
We are alive at a good time for this. These "things" have not been made in a long time, and repair techs are no longer trained in any Formal/Corporate manner. We have the techs that we have, and many of them are getting long in the tooth.
Not sure what brought this all on...I think it is the "What's Your Latest New Old Camera"" forum. It made me wonder, in 40 years, who will be buying my camera gear.? WILL anybody want to buy it, and will the stuff be repairable to any degree...will there be guys that Can/Know how to perform a competent CLA.?
I have always looked back and thought..."Man, I wish I had been alive then". Because of these film cameras, there is a chance, that someday, some young Guy/Gal might actually be envious of the time THAT I was alive in.
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