ktmrider
Well-known
Don't know when the article was written but I believe Eric Kim uses a film Leica (MP) and a 35 Summicron. Don't have much in the way of comments on his work but he resists GAS pretty well if you read his blog.
I think you misunderstood: "take out new loans" is NOT "getting in dept". You have to show that you are a responsible loaner. So simply open a credit card account and don't use it. This will increase your credit score a lot.No kidding. I have an excellent credit rating but it has dropped a bit since the loans I had were paid off. The tips I get to improve my credit is to take out new loans i.e. get in debt again.
So essentially I am being penalized by being debt free. This whole credit rating scam is to pump up the economy and keep people forever owing.
🙄No, he's more practical than that. Not about posing or bragging, he just gets the job done with things that are a better value. I know he loved an Olympus OM-1 for years. His wife got that too.
Not true that it is always best to buy cash and never on credit (apart from the fact that we wouldn't have much of an economy if everyone would only buy cash):
I'm financing my new car through the bank at 0% interest rate for five years when it is paid off in full. Would have been stupid to buy it cash.
People would have more disposable income if they weren't paying it out in interest. Buying with cash you never lose sleep over losing your car or house or whatever if something goes wrong. A lot of people lose their jobs causing them to lose their house and cars.
I'm moving into a new house this week I'm paying cash for. I'm moving from a very upscale neighborhood. In the past 4 or 5 years about 10 homes around me have gone into foreclosure. The owners depended on both husband and wife having a specific income. One lost their job and couldn't find another or one that paid as well and they lost their house. Lots of debt and no savings sunk their ship.
I can sleep better at night knowing that can't happen to me.
But Don....what you say about your situation is so not what most people get to do, it is not even on the radar of feasible for most people who are looking to buy a home, so you must be older than 60, right?
With developers / investors buying up homes like those in foreclosure turning them around for rent / Airbnb, it is making it really hard for a lot of people to buy homes. The high rents make it to where families can not save enough, this is a big problem with greed balls like Blackstone gobbling up homes to flip or rent at above market rates.
So not everyone can afford to do what you are doing, I certainly can't with average home prices at 4-6 million in my town. My wife and I are largely out of debt but will have to save at least $300-500k for a down payment on a $1.5 million condo in order to have a monthly note of not more than 4K per month. We could easily afford more but I am capping it at 4K monthly in case one of us has a job / major client loss.
I know what you say is ideal in practice, but since the economic crash, greed has put home ownership well out of reach for a lot of Americans. And now the rental market is shrinking to give way to high profit Airbnb, a really big problem that only some cities are putting regulations on.
That is capitalism for you though, screw everyone else, at least they get to sleep at night.
But Don....what you say about your situation is so not what most people get to do, it is not even on the radar of feasible for most people who are looking to buy a home, so you must be older than 60, right?
With developers / investors buying up homes like those in foreclosure turning them around for rent / Airbnb, it is making it really hard for a lot of people to buy homes. The high rents make it to where families can not save enough, this is a big problem with greed balls like Blackstone gobbling up homes to flip or rent at above market rates.
So not everyone can afford to do what you are doing, I certainly can't with average home prices at 4-6 million in my town. My wife and I are largely out of debt but will have to save at least $300-500k for a down payment on a $1.5 million condo in order to have a monthly note of not more than 4K per month. We could easily afford more but I am capping it at 4K monthly in case one of us has a job / major client loss.
I know what you say is ideal in practice, but since the economic crash, greed has put home ownership well out of reach for a lot of Americans. And now the rental market is shrinking to give way to high profit Airbnb, a really big problem that only some cities are putting regulations on.
That is capitalism for you though, screw everyone else, at least they get to sleep at night.
Agree, I phrased that carefully.The key word is "hobby". Business is another matter.
Cheers,
R.
I know no bank which loans at 0%. Or they all would have gone into bankrupt.I'm financing my new car through the bank at 0% interest rate for five years when it is paid off in full. Would have been stupid to buy it cash.
I think you misunderstood: "take out new loans" is NOT "getting in dept". You have to show that you are a responsible loaner. So simply open a credit card account and don't use it. This will increase your credit score a lot.
I agree with most of what you're saying. Greed and big corporate have taken a toll on my business too. I really understand.
It gets harder and harder for most folks including me but I live within my means. I drove my last car 12 years and my wife's car is 13 years old but in great shape. I saved and paid cash for a new Jeep Weangler Unlimited ...
... But I don't own any house, I never could afford that and never wanted to get into a mortgage process, so I rent a flat. And my life is nice enough. 🙂
Hi,
Interesting point, I've noticed that a lot of prosperous countries (mainland Europe mainly) have rent controls and it is normal to rent. I wonder if there's a link. It would make the labour market more flexible...
Dear Garrett,No debt = no worries. ... .
I thought you probably did. Some, however, have not read it as carefully. And as KM-25 put it,Agree, I phrased that carefully.
Dear Garett,No, he's more practical than that. Not about posing or bragging, he just gets the job done with things that are a better value. I know he loved an Olympus OM-1 for years. His wife got that too.
Dear Chris,The $4000 a month you're budgeting for a house payment is $48,000 a year. That is more than 75% of full-time American workers earn in a year!
Even your situation of far outside the bounds of reality for most Americans.
That was all true during the film era (although the Leica film cameras never were as reliable as their marketing hype told they were, but this is another story).For many others it's about a small, light, easy-to-use camera that lasts a very long time (as least in the days of film cameras) and TAKING PICTURES. The anti-Leica brigade often seems to neglect these aspects of Leica ownership.
They're still small, light and unobtrusive. A D700 isn't. That's quite a compelling argument as far as I am concerned.That was all true during the film era (although the Leica film cameras never were as reliable as their marketing hype told they were, but this is another story).
Now at the digital age, a Nikon D700 with a good Nikkor lens would be a way better choice for the modest photographer ready to drop $1000 in a second hand kit which will take picture after picture without any problem and may virtually last forever without any maintenance or repair. The D700 was marketed long ago enough now so we all can know how highly reliable it is.
Someone I know just sent his M8 to Wetzlar because that camera (which he had bought from new and always used as a careful amateur) suddenly ceased to work. The camera came back and the invoice for the repair was 1,075 euros. And if you consider what happened to almost all the M9 units... well.
I don't belong to any "anti-Leica brigade" but we all have to acknowledge that, today, the digital Leica Ms are everything but reliable cameras which will be used for taking pictures for a lifetime without forcing their owners to spend top dollars on them for repair on quite a regular basis.