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I am starting to entertain thoughts of selling my CV gear, but can't quite come to terms with the idea yet.
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If I ever do sell, I am sure I will stick around on RFF.
nice looking kit!
I am starting to entertain thoughts of selling my CV gear, but can't quite come to terms with the idea yet.
![]()
If I ever do sell, I am sure I will stick around on RFF.
I'm doing a master's degree in photography, and needed an efficient, workhorse camera.
Several of our moderators 🙂
in my case it was the other way round. i started to read here regularly, because of the quality of this forum. then i bought a rangefinder... (to be accurate: then i bought some rangefinders)
I am starting to entertain thoughts of selling my CV gear, but can't quite come to terms with the idea yet.
![]()
If I ever do sell, I am sure I will stick around on RFF.
Thanks. I just shot a test roll of film thru an M3 last weekend. I discovered my D7k makes me a lot better photographer than I realized. Taking photos with a manual camera is a lot of 'work' for someone whose photo experience has only started to come to life with the advent of digital photography.
Your D7k actually hides you from needing to BECOME a photographer. Photography is about the capture of light and presenting it the way YOU want it presented. The way you're shooting now, you're presenting it the way the guy who programmed your camera thinks it ought to be seen. You may be doing the framing, but the programmer is doing everything else, and framing is only a small part of making a photograph.
nice looking kit!
Let me give you a tip. Sell the bodies if you must. PUt the glass away in a safe place. In a few years, you'll be glad you kept it. Voice of experience here. I wish I'd kept all MY m-mount glass. The price of admission to buy it all again just continues to climb.
And trust me, if you sell, you'll be buying it back again one day. 😉
Personal choice. The course is intense, especially as I work full time too (luckily I can choose which days to work as I'm self-employed), and a rangefinder slowed me down too much (in a bad way). I need to get the image I expect, and a rangefinder is simply too inaccurate - the viewfinder doesn't show you what you will get. Doing projects for university means having to shoot to meet deadlines, so if your practice doesn't involve chance and randomness in the photograph, then a rangefinder is a poor choice of tool. University study is all about the image, so the camera must support that.I entertained the idea of signing up for a photography postgrad degree a couple of times, I would've go in there and done everything with my Leica M8.2 (or the new M, hypothetically).
Did your university recommend you get rid of the M8 or did you feel it couldn't do what you needed it to do and if so what couldn't it do?
What you say is true as long as he stays in Auto. As soon as he steps into the PASM modes (well, actually just ASM) then his D7000 is the same as any other camera out there, film or digital. And one thing that digital really does excel at is immediate feedback plus the recording of metadata like exposure settings and the like. Much better than taking notes like before and you can progress infinitely faster in most cases. That said, if you don't learn to read the light it doesn't matter what camera you own, you're gonna be sunk.