If You Could Start All Over Again.....

JoeFriday said:
I'm at the verge of quitting my job and going back to school full-time while living like a poor college student again just so I can do what I should have done over 10 years ago

Do it! You'll regret it if you don't...learning for the sake of learning is one of the most prfitable endeavours I can think of! As soon as I'm 65 and University is free, I'm taking everything all over again!
 
In 40+ years there's little of any significance that I would have done differently. I'm happy to have mostly concentrated early on one brand of gear (Pentax), and got into RF gear way back too (used M2 in '67), so RFs weren't a shock later. 🙂

A recent regret was a compounded error in finding a 500mm mirror lens in OM mount, learning it wasn't interchangeable for Pentax mount, and then getting an OM body to use it on! Not that Olympus OMs are bad; it just would have been simpler to find the lens in PK mount instead. I also slightly regret an early dalliance with half-frame 35 format... like getting a 2Mp digital these days: Why deliberately limit resolution? I'm glad that medium format finally matured before its market died, and I'm glad I never bought into the do-everything all-motorized AF SLRs.

Fortunately I've usually been a careful shopper, did my research and bought well for the long term despite the financial pinch at the time. Good lesson: Think carefully about what you want to do, then get quality gear and keep it. Look at lots of pictures, preferably original prints, and think about what you've seen. Get involved with other activities that interest you as well, broaden your horizons.
 
Bottom line : don't buy a whole lot of stuff and expect that more stuff will lead to more learning or more enjoyment. In fact, it often leads to less enjoyment. Perhaps more learning, but often the wrong kind of learning.

And, if you know photography already, you are probably aware that the better quality tools are generally the most expensive. A good point to make would be that one is wiser spending a load of cash on a very nice body and lens, and not that same quantity on a cruddy body and a pile of cruddy lenses. That doesn't mean spend tons of cash, but only choose the best value in terms of quality, not quantity. I have come to understand that having bunches of lenses is not as useful as having one lens and knowing how to use it for a bunch of uses. You will be best served with a single body/lens combination of high quality that you can master, become totally comfortable with, carry with you easily, etc. And one that you can count on functioning well for its entire term in your possession. That is a big one. Don't trade reliability for cost savings.

Now, quantity/quality/cost thing is not totally black and white. Used equipment, for instance, is cheaper but usually the same quality. Or better sometimes. The Leica M3 is one good example of a used body that is better quality that its newest incarnation (arguably). And costs less. And Leica, while holding the #1 position in terms of quality and exotic-ness, does not have that much over Voigtlander and Canon and Nikon for image quality, though the classic Leicas (M3, M6, MP) are legendary for their body quality for a good reason. The argument for quality over quanity applies more easily to Zorki/Leica or Vivitar/Nikon. Obvious reliability/quality of construction differences.
 
thanks, all!

what a WONDERFUL thread this has turned out to be! the information here is invaluable and should be required reading for any new or struggling photographer. more to say but late for work. i printed out the whole thread thus far to read and reread today.

keep them coming!!

billy
 
I now have a 35mm rangefinder, and a 120 format SLR. For those not in the know; frame filling macro is a weak point for both..

If I were to do it all over again, I'd do it the other way round.. A medium format rangefinder and a 35mm SLR.
 
'lets say you were in my position, a true rookie. what do you wish you would have done from the start? what choices would you have made that would have saved you TIME and MONEY?'

- Buy a Konica C35. It's cheap, small and takes great pictures. It took me two years and 12 cameras to find out that some cheap cameras can take pictures as good as expensive cameras.
- Be careful with repairing your cameras. I've ruined 2 nice cameras: a Yashica Electro 35 GT and a Konica S. Now I only do really simple repairs: cleaning the shutterblades and adjusting the rangefinder. When I open a camera I make pictures of each step so I can always look how to put it back together again. Ofcourse it depends on your skills.
- When you buy a rangefinder make shure it works fine or can be easily repaired. A lot of people sell their camera because they are cleaning up the basement. After 30 years they usually don't know if it is working or not.

Good luck.
 
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