Perhaps a lot of people (not us obviously) think bad means slow, as in f/2.8 ?
Regards, David
It's interesting because for a long time photographers knew that fast lenses were meant to be fast foremost, and sharpness was secondary. For SLR users the f2 Biotar was what you needed for action or low light situations, but everybody knew that the f3.5 Tessar was what you wanted if sharpness counted.
I think people began to make the slow = bad connection because cheap cameras came with cheap lenses. And these cheap lenses were usually slow.
As regards the original topic, eventually this discussion basically boils down to whether a good camera is necessary or not to take good photos. Obviously the photographer's vision is more important than the camera, but a good camera helps!
🙂
I have used some of the nastiest cameras imaginable, and I can say you have to get to a very, very low level of quality before the camera's faults inhibit the photographer's ability to create interesting images.
The above is from what I think I can say is the worst camera I have ever attempted to use. A "Can-Tex" 127 camera. It actually broke half way through the roll.
The viewfinder only vaguely covered the same area as the lens. The frames overlapped. The film was not flat. The light leaked through it like a sieve, and finally the advance knob broke.
Well You can't do much worse than that.
A few notches up - I used an Agfa-Ansco box camera, which was reliable enough to be predictable, and trust is the single most important thing you can have in a camera.
Frequently though, the photographer requires more control to get the results he or she wants. Some shutter speeds, more than two or three f-stops to choose from etc.
Some of my favorite photos I've taken with a rather cruddy Ciro 35 (scan does not do the printing of this image a shred of justice, but you get the idea I hope).
And I had a long, long fling with a Praktiflex and its f3.5 Tessar.
Above this level, the differences in quality are not that large. You begin to pay a lot more for just a little better equipment and it becomes a game of diminishing returns as I'm sure most of us know. After spending more and more on better and better equipment, I ended up going back down a few notches.
I didn't need the fancy stuff for
my vision. Maybe in the future I will, but maybe I won't. I'll know when I get there.
🙂
As long as you get the results you want, it doesn't matter what you use.