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If you could have it back......


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Quite a few I wish I hadn’t spent money on; none I wished I had back.

Almost the same. - After thinking very hard, I do regret buying 2 used light stands for my employer (instead of for myself) and splitting with my Jobo CPE 2 and a nice handy tank for 5 reels of 35mm.

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I can’t believe I sold the Leica IIIc (a bit ratty, but my first good camera) for the same $50 it cost me a few years before. I got the SLR bug, bought the newly released (1966) Canon TL-QL, and never looked back. I could have scraped up the $50 by playing one more party with my band. Oh well - I was young and dumb.
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A Speed Graphic which I only owned for a year or so then sold. With a focal plane and/or leaf shutter. It could be used hand held.

Also a Minolta X700 and 35-70mm lens. One of my first cameras that travelled the world with me and gave fantastic results. I part ex'd the Minolta for a Nikon F4s and got less than £150 for it. I since bought another X700 (which soon broke) but I would still like the very one I sold if only for sentimental reasons.

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Justification

 

I'm usually stuck here.

“I never made a mistake in my life; at least, never one that I couldn't explain away afterwards.”

—Rudyard Kipling

 

And one especially relevant for the occasional photographer engaged in a discussion about gear ...

 

“The opposite of creation is not destruction but JUSTIFICATION. If you don’t have what you want, you have been justifying (trying to prove your wrong actions are right), not creating.”

—Meir Ezra

 

:)

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"You talkin' to me?"

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There are limits to what can be done with a tiny sensor

LOL. Don't be too sure of that. There's a more full quotation than the one most have only heard a portion of ...

It's not the size of the ship or the motion of the ocean... It is whether the captain stays in port long enough for all passengers to get off.

Seriously, though, limits are relative. There are actually unlimited things one can do with a cell phone sensor but there are also some technical limits that and any other piece of equipment will constrain one to. Just as there are unlimited approaches to photography but probably some personal and cultural limits consciously or unconsciously imposed on the unlimited photographic possibilities, regardless of equipment size, shape, brand, and price.

 

Somewhere in the counterpoint of limits and unlimitedness, photos get made.

"You talkin' to me?"

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Sounds like one of those astounding predictions from Eisenhower-era Popular Mechanics magazine. Still waiting for a flying car...

If true...think of the wonderful opportunities for those of us who prefer cameras, better even than when digital first overtook film, to get fabulous pro equipment for pennies on the dollar! Got some GREAT stuff back then.

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Great question. I'd love to have my very first 35mm camera back. It was a fixed focus point-and-shoot Canon Snappy with graphics from the 1984 Olympics. My (extremely parsimonious) father must have found it in a closeout bin in December of '84 so he decided on it for a birthday gift for me. I shot many hundreds of bad pictures with that camera until I upgraded to a Minolta a few years later. But those cheesy images were the foundation of a lifetime of images to come and (something I would never have imagined) a full time career as a fine art, commercial and editorial photographer. That Snappy is what started it all for me and I'd love to have it back.
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LOL. Don't be too sure of that. There's a more full quotation than the one most have only heard a portion of ...

 

Seriously, though, limits are relative. There are actually unlimited things one can do with a cell phone sensor but there are also some technical limits that and any other piece of equipment will constrain one to. Just as there are unlimited approaches to photography but probably some personal and cultural limits consciously or unconsciously imposed on the unlimited photographic possibilities, regardless of equipment size, shape, brand, and price.

 

Somewhere in the counterpoint of limits and unlimitedness, photos get made.

 

That sounds a bit philosophical, but I'm speaking more of the limit in physics. In any event I don't see a future time when a tiny sensor beats or equals a larger one given the same technology.

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When I found out that my stowed away 25 years old destined for goodwill Yashica T4 was worth twice the price I paid in the 90's, I sold it and laughed at the stupid buyer (quietly).

Now it is worth 3 times the original price and rising for reasons I don't comprehend.

 

It is like Gamestop stocks. Someone on Reddit must trading it up from worthless just to defy an old fart like me.

 

My regret is that I should have kept it a little longer and cashed in. Well, not really, I already felt bad selling it at twice the price - it is an OK lens with a terrible implementation of a plastic camera wrapped around it.

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Niels
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