kiev4a
Well-known
I started out learning how to develop film in the basement darkroom with my dad back in the 1950s. When I got my first 35mm camera (an Ansco Super Memar that I still have) I thought that was about the neatest thing ever. Up to 36 photos without reloading ---WOW!
In the '60s and '70s photography helped put food on the table.
When I got back into photography after a 20 plus year absence it was to take pictures of my daughter's wedding so I found equipment I was familiar with -- Nikons from the 1970s. Then I stumbled across the Russian Leica clones and thought boy -- it would be neat to have some momentos from a society that no longer exists. But then I started thinking of the Mamiya TLR I once owned and had to have one of them. Then I remembered the Koni Omega I once used to shoot a rodeo and had to have one of them. Then ......
I like the mechanical cameras because they are unsophisticated enough that they make you stop and think a little before you shoot. I like the feel of the metal and the leather or vulcanite coverings. I like the the heft of mechanical cameras. I like the idea that I am using a 50-year-old "precision instrument" rather than a plastic box filled with computer chips that is designed to be obsolete in 18 months.
I. . . .well. . . if you are reading this you probably already understand. It doesn't need to be explained.
And one other thing. Here's to my partner in life of 38 years who almost never says a critical work about my affliction -- probably figuring there are many obsessions that would be a lot worse!
In the '60s and '70s photography helped put food on the table.
When I got back into photography after a 20 plus year absence it was to take pictures of my daughter's wedding so I found equipment I was familiar with -- Nikons from the 1970s. Then I stumbled across the Russian Leica clones and thought boy -- it would be neat to have some momentos from a society that no longer exists. But then I started thinking of the Mamiya TLR I once owned and had to have one of them. Then I remembered the Koni Omega I once used to shoot a rodeo and had to have one of them. Then ......
I like the mechanical cameras because they are unsophisticated enough that they make you stop and think a little before you shoot. I like the feel of the metal and the leather or vulcanite coverings. I like the the heft of mechanical cameras. I like the idea that I am using a 50-year-old "precision instrument" rather than a plastic box filled with computer chips that is designed to be obsolete in 18 months.
I. . . .well. . . if you are reading this you probably already understand. It doesn't need to be explained.
And one other thing. Here's to my partner in life of 38 years who almost never says a critical work about my affliction -- probably figuring there are many obsessions that would be a lot worse!
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