R
ruben
Guest
This post has nothing to do with "which gear for a trip". It deals with what may work best for me, and perhaps for you: MF, SLR, RF
Because basically, if I exclude my Olympic SLR times as a free lancer photojournalist, overseas trips have meant for me "lots of time to photograph" - which I don't have at home. Concentrated lots of time.
Be said as well, that like the fully packed US marine, during my photojournalist times I used to carry around 6 kg gear, some of the time engaged in street fighting. So I cannot say I was photographically born under the influence of the "one lens - one camera" curious talk & trend I have read about at RFF.
My first photo accounted overseas trip was to Argentina, to visit my family and the country. I decided this was the time to test my Mamiya TLRs SYSTEM. Most of the time there I have been cursing the time I was born. However back at home when scanning and seeing the results of MF - I got another slap in the opposite direction: the pictures I managed not to miss due to the unflexibility of MF were a delight to my eyes.
The following overseas trip I let my Mamys to rest, and took instead my war-gear for the West Bank and Gaza, minus some components, and immersed myself within Buenos Aires for several weeks - This was the most succesfull crop of my life. Compact OM slrs, winders, several lenses - worked, as if I was in a war zone.
You can say that there is no wonder since I was very much used to this gear, but street photography is not war photography at all.
At my third overseas attempt into Prague, I went absolutely sloppy due to some hamer blow I may have got several days before, and decided to go OM slr, but "compact". Here I lost the picture of my life due to that "compactness".
A following visit to Istambul, where I took my Kievs with all lenses, is not to be accounted here since I suffered from two external mighty obstacles: lack of experience with the Kievs (never before I used any so intensively), and my wife, who went crazy while I was hardly changing lens, metering light etc - time after time. Divorce was there on the horizon. But some good pics were cropped.
Now, I have went back from Turkey again. To this trip I took two Canonets and a third Oly SP. I could have taken three Kievs but by now I do not have a third Kiev ready for war. So this imposed a different course.
This last time founded me with a good edge to take into account too: Due to my RFF years I became a more experienced street photographer. Am I sorry or happy for going there with RF instead of SLRs? Great interesting question I ask myself.
Ceirtainly with the experiene came the illness, I am used to absolute silent shutter and once you get used to this weakness - you are almost doomed.
Ceirtainly the lack of zooming was felt in a foreign land. But on the other hand the pair of Canonets and my experience went into a not so bad a dance.
Therefore, I think two more trips are required for a final personal answer. One with a clever OM gear selection. The other with my current Kiev gear I am very used to. Meanwhile - undecided.
Yet the options have narrowed quite nicely.
Cheers,
Ruben
Because basically, if I exclude my Olympic SLR times as a free lancer photojournalist, overseas trips have meant for me "lots of time to photograph" - which I don't have at home. Concentrated lots of time.
Be said as well, that like the fully packed US marine, during my photojournalist times I used to carry around 6 kg gear, some of the time engaged in street fighting. So I cannot say I was photographically born under the influence of the "one lens - one camera" curious talk & trend I have read about at RFF.
My first photo accounted overseas trip was to Argentina, to visit my family and the country. I decided this was the time to test my Mamiya TLRs SYSTEM. Most of the time there I have been cursing the time I was born. However back at home when scanning and seeing the results of MF - I got another slap in the opposite direction: the pictures I managed not to miss due to the unflexibility of MF were a delight to my eyes.
The following overseas trip I let my Mamys to rest, and took instead my war-gear for the West Bank and Gaza, minus some components, and immersed myself within Buenos Aires for several weeks - This was the most succesfull crop of my life. Compact OM slrs, winders, several lenses - worked, as if I was in a war zone.
You can say that there is no wonder since I was very much used to this gear, but street photography is not war photography at all.
At my third overseas attempt into Prague, I went absolutely sloppy due to some hamer blow I may have got several days before, and decided to go OM slr, but "compact". Here I lost the picture of my life due to that "compactness".
A following visit to Istambul, where I took my Kievs with all lenses, is not to be accounted here since I suffered from two external mighty obstacles: lack of experience with the Kievs (never before I used any so intensively), and my wife, who went crazy while I was hardly changing lens, metering light etc - time after time. Divorce was there on the horizon. But some good pics were cropped.
Now, I have went back from Turkey again. To this trip I took two Canonets and a third Oly SP. I could have taken three Kievs but by now I do not have a third Kiev ready for war. So this imposed a different course.
This last time founded me with a good edge to take into account too: Due to my RFF years I became a more experienced street photographer. Am I sorry or happy for going there with RF instead of SLRs? Great interesting question I ask myself.
Ceirtainly with the experiene came the illness, I am used to absolute silent shutter and once you get used to this weakness - you are almost doomed.
Ceirtainly the lack of zooming was felt in a foreign land. But on the other hand the pair of Canonets and my experience went into a not so bad a dance.
Therefore, I think two more trips are required for a final personal answer. One with a clever OM gear selection. The other with my current Kiev gear I am very used to. Meanwhile - undecided.
Yet the options have narrowed quite nicely.
Cheers,
Ruben
Last edited by a moderator: