Vics
Veteran
You mean the thrifty poor kind of person who also sunny 16's becasue they are too thrifty to buy a light meter as well? That kind?😀
I have three light meters and still enjoy Sunny 16.
Vic😉
You mean the thrifty poor kind of person who also sunny 16's becasue they are too thrifty to buy a light meter as well? That kind?😀
Welcome to the fun world of online discussion, where we classify ourselves into ever-smaller boxes, and then insist that anyone not in that same tiny pigeonhole with us is 'wrong', or at the very least, 'not like us'. If we find ourselves in rare agreement about anything, it is time to redraw the lines even more tightly, so that the group of 'us' ('us' being the smart ones, the 'real photographers') never becomes more than just a few.
It must be some inner desire that humans possess to create an us-vs-them mentality out of everything. Coke and Pepsi, Ford and Chevy, Canon and Nikon, Film and Digital, Auto-Exposure and Manual Exposure, and etc.
Creatures which overspecialize become extinct when the world changes and they've lost the ability to adapt.
I use everything. New, old, manual, fully automatic, digital, film, point-n-shoot, whatever. I like 'em all. I don't know if it makes me a certain 'type' but then again, I tend to think specialization is for insects.
When a seventeen year old expresses an interest in manual camaras and old (sort of) cars I find it heartening and proof that there will always be a generation with these preferences.
Now get away from the computer and write us all a letter telling us more about why you feel this way please! 😛
I just find the simpler - aperture, shutter speed, set film speed, and way more fun to use. Ironic that the manuals for one of these things is a small pamphlet while the digital monstrosities come with a paperback to read while you're on the can.
Prefer a manual transmission too, and wear only vintage spring-wound watches.
The only thing that I don't prefer the old school way is shaving. Electric razor guy. Would never go back to using a razor.
I know I'd be at a loss with the fancier Canikon dSLRs, but that still leaves a lot of neat stuff (with some auto features or none) for a gearhead to enjoy. 🙂
Finally, as an observation, I think we overlook a lot of "automatic" features by taking them for granted. I'm thinking here of, for instance, an automatic frame counter that even zeros itself when the back opens. Automatic film stop at the next frame, film advance combined with shutter cocking, coupled RF, etc. All these can be present and we still think of the camera as "fully manual". On "fully manual" cars we still have automatic choke or electronic control of fuel injection, self-cancelling turn signals, brake lights that come on automatically when you press the brake pedal, and other automated features. Have we gotten soft?