Harry S.
Well-known
...On a 2 month vacation to Japan.
This is a trip that has been over a year in planning, desired since I last visited Japan in 2009. Even so, camera choice even up until 5 minutes ago has been a contentious subject.
The problem with me, and I think many people here; is we are spoilt for choice. I have all the cameras anyone could ever need, but I find an excuse for all of them. The DSLR is too heavy, the mirror-less not quite delivering on image quality and the Leica without the convenience of aperture priority. First world problems.
I've decided to go with my Mamiya 7 and 65mm lens only. There are lots of problems with this choice. Its big, slow lens and lack of digital convenience the main ones. What I can't deny is the image quality it (and its film) is capable of. I also like that it doesn't have the modern conveniences of digital. No facebook status pics while on the road. Just (hopefully) quality when I get home, re-igniting some of the magic and adventure and uncertainty of travel photography.
Sorry and thank you for the long winded post and for reading this far. I'm just really excited at this realization.
Regards,
Harry.
This is a trip that has been over a year in planning, desired since I last visited Japan in 2009. Even so, camera choice even up until 5 minutes ago has been a contentious subject.
The problem with me, and I think many people here; is we are spoilt for choice. I have all the cameras anyone could ever need, but I find an excuse for all of them. The DSLR is too heavy, the mirror-less not quite delivering on image quality and the Leica without the convenience of aperture priority. First world problems.
I've decided to go with my Mamiya 7 and 65mm lens only. There are lots of problems with this choice. Its big, slow lens and lack of digital convenience the main ones. What I can't deny is the image quality it (and its film) is capable of. I also like that it doesn't have the modern conveniences of digital. No facebook status pics while on the road. Just (hopefully) quality when I get home, re-igniting some of the magic and adventure and uncertainty of travel photography.
Sorry and thank you for the long winded post and for reading this far. I'm just really excited at this realization.
Regards,
Harry.