if you were king of the cameras...

i started thinking about this as i was thinking about the perfect street camera...what might be different if the camera was designed especially for street shooting...prime, zoom, interchangeable lenses, body size etc...
 
Different cameras for different uses.

That's how I justify having three different camera systems. One for work, one for doc projects, and one for just funning' around.

Could be rationalizing. 🙂

Best,
-Tim
 
I am a best-tool-for-the-job kind of guy.
You need to drive nails? - buy a hammer, etc etc etc You need to shoot "street" buy a _____, etc etc etc
The concept of a camera / lens setup that is "all things to all people" comes from the manufacturing / marketing side of the fence. Not that it is a bad concept, it just does not work for me.
(Well, I do own a zoom lens, so that's kind of a compromise.)
 
Neither: I would decree a manufacturing system to produce exactly what you--the photographer--wanted. Sort of an ultimate A la Carte/print (CNC) on demand.

Rob
 
A great, simple, digital camera with film camera controls.

No video, no bells, no whistles, no nothing,

And I want it simple- no diving through menus to find ****. Simple. Direct. No scene modes, no party effects, etc. Simple but useful. Give me a great camera.

Give me manual controls in a bad ass digital body.

And I shoot digital and have now for many years. Give me a digital camera that shoots just like an old fashioned film camera.
 
Porsche built the Cayenne and it makes up half of global Porsche sales - but I'd get a Boxster just for the fun it...

Rob's suggestion might be possible, a limitless variety of custom designs based on the photographer's metrics (hand size, left or right-eyed) and preferences (location of shutter button etc) and 3-D printing at the factory, to order.

Artists don't just use a one-size-fits-all general purpose paint brush.

So I'd always prefer specific tools optimised for specific tasks, with some standard modularity (mount type) where practicable.

And why would one want to create a cure for GAS? 🙂
 
I have to agree with Rick. Give me a digital camera, the looks and build
quality of an M-series or at least a Bessa, buttons and dials for everything
I care about, ISO, shutter speed, etc. Then a rangefinder patch, M-mount,
full-frame and a crank for that creative pause! The great irony of it all,
it pretty much ends up being what we could have expected from an Epson RD-2...
 
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I quite like the idea of a modular camera with different sensor and film backs and different lens mount modules, like a more developed and smaller version of what Rollei tried to do with the SL 2000/3003. Differrnt optional hand grips and flash mounts too. I think there were some design exercises recently from Samsung(?) or someone. I think the Ricoh GXR wasn't quite there with the modularity idea but could nearly have been. Dials, simplified menus, build quality and all those good things too of course.
 
A great, simple, digital camera with film camera controls.

No video, no bells, no whistles, no nothing,

And I want it simple- no diving through menus to find ****. Simple. Direct. No scene modes, no party effects, etc. Simple but useful. Give me a great camera.

Give me manual controls in a bad ass digital body.

And I shoot digital and have now for many years. Give me a digital camera that shoots just like an old fashioned film camera.

Have you tried a Df Rick? I haven't, but I must say that I think about it from time to time.

I like your new avatar.
 
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