I wish I'd never sold my...

Shortly After the first Golf war around 1991 a friend picked me up a very old Omega Speedmaster watch on the grey market in Bagdad. It gets a service in Switzerland, I learned that it was build 1968 and delivered to Hongkong. It. was a pre moon Speedmaster with a rare 321 machine inside.
I wore the watch for Ten years. Than Omega wanted for a check and clean 800 bucks and I sold it for 1.000 bucks on eBay.
I miss it...
 
Sell? A camera? Are you mad? I haven't used the Speed Graphic in 15 years. And the Rollei, and the folders, and....couldn't possibly. Keep 'em locked away in the filing cabinets and take 'em out and carress them from time to time, but sell? An insane thought!

i'm with you Auld Bob... have 3 graphics and a 2x3 Busch Pressman and 2 super Ikontas and a trio of pentaxes and a brace of Nikons and a Foton and Leicas.....
wife says sell one,,,,,, need to find someone who wants a Foton and has a IIIF RD ST

David
 
@ Godfrey - what a cool story !


My most recent regret is selling my Panasonic LX3. That sent me to an X10 that I traded for a lens that induced me to put a few other lenses up for sale. One thing leads to another I guess.
 
Godfrey -- beautifully told. I'd love to share your story with a few friends of mine, old car heads who don't merely collect them but actually drive them. Would that be all right?

Do you write professionally?

On the topic at hand: I've bought and sold several IIIf's and Canon P's and Nikon S2's and Contax IIa's. But I'm currently equipped with all of those, because whenever the regret starts I start plotting to re-acquire... I'm unemployed now so those days might be over. Indeed right now I'm plotting to sell off a huge amount, really clean house, which suits my current mood and my current pocketbook. Whenever I think, oh no I can't part with THAT, I think in turn, hell, you can always get another one sometime if it means so much to you. On the other hand: I decided this 3 weeks ago and haven't sold anything yet.

I do miss the FM3A I sold here a couple of months ago.....
 
My first M6ttl only because I used it on a Himalaya trip.
An An F2AS I sold a few years ago and off topic a BMW R100S I sold in 1986 :(
I like the Lambo story Godfrey, reminded me of time spent with a quattrovalve Countach. The sound of those V12's is truly an experience.
 
Godfrey -- beautifully told. I'd love to share your story with a few friends of mine, old car heads who don't merely collect them but actually drive them. Would that be all right?

Do you write professionally? ...

Thanks for all the compliments on my Lambo piece.

Yes, I'm a technical writer today ... but I started writing and self-publishing stories when I was in high school, what seems like eons ago. Before the photo of me and the Lambo was made. Now I (slowly) concentrate my creative writing on photo books, when I'm not written out by work.

G
 
Leica M6 TTL Millennium.

I sold it cause I couldnt get myself to use it, it was just too perfectly new and spotless. I tried for about a year to replace it with a user, but couldnt find any reasonably priced ones. Finally just gave up and moved on with a Japanese market M6TTL.
 
Zuiko OM 35-70/3.6
The greatest compact zoom in the most usable range. But I could not predict how good OM lenses could be on sony a7((
 
I'd have to go with my books.

In a quite brutal set of requirements in moving from Scotland to London when I took at job at the Tate, I went from a 5 bedroom house with a double garage to a single room shared with my then girlfriend. I got down to 10 packing boxes and a single drawer unit!

Although I ditched cars, 5 skips of the history of my life and paired down to what I could I miss my books the most. Countless hours spent either staring at an image, absorbing knowledge in the best way man has yet to invent aside from 1 on 1 interaction.

Even the physical sight of them is very underrated now. You can select with complete control. They are ergonomically very good .. cause no eye strain and never crash ( well set aside fire and water damage )

Needless to say I didn't last long in the city, when I was allowed to continue working remotely. Now I live a very spartan life. Although, the upside is I can enjoy the merits of 2 wheels under power rather with my slightly less than exhilarating self propulsion unit pushing me forward.

Steven
 
Had a camera stolen and only sold one over the years. About 25 years on I did replace the one that was stolen and it ended up being the only one I ever sold. It wasn't as good as I remembered ;-)

Casey

The same thing happened to me! My Minolta CLE was stolen and I used the insurance money to buy my first Leica M6. Several years went by, and I was able to find another CLE at a good price and I snapped it up.

It only took a little while to realize that I disliked some things about the camera. I was able to sell it at the same price I bought it though.
 
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