A semi-truck has dozens of gears. How on earth does a trucker choose which one to use? .....Please.
My Land Rover has 16 forward and 4 reverse gears -- ...
I dont know about your truck but many vehicles including the highest end autos have only one gear - its called automatic.
I think the above quote was perhaps intended by Welles nas more applicable to the conceptual side rather than the 'tools of the trade'
I figure the chances that I'll stumble upon great shots with Camera A and Lens B are just as good as with Camera B and Lens A.
Yes that is what I do now! I use one and forget I have anything else! 😀
Bill,
It is my conviction that if I were to chase you out on Hollywood blvd with one camera and one lens, a lens you tend to like, you are more likely to be productive, and respond much better to the constantly changing waves and moments of the blvd.
i'm writing a symphony...i'm only using one note.
i'm writing a symphony...i'm only using one note.
4′33″ (pronounced Four minutes, thirty-three seconds) is a three-movement composition .... and the score instructs the performer not to play the instrument during the entire duration of the piece
Yeah, but I'm just a guy walking around with a camera and a lens, mostly because I'm too lazy to carry more stuff. If I was working on a photographic symphony, I'd probably know what kind of images I needed, and, hence, what kind of camera and lens combination I needed for each sortie. And I certainly would work to a plan, rather than go on random walks (as obnoxious as I'd find that).
I'm just saying that, for me, usually I have no idea when I start out if I'm going to see things that merit a wide angle or a telephoto, or fast or slow lenses, or whatever. So, one camera and one lens is as likely to pay off as any other combination. Carrying more bodies and more lenses is a hassle that detracts from the fun. Whether or not that makes me take better pictures is, I think, something of a non sequitur.
i'm writing a symphony...i'm only using one note.
sorry bill, my comment wasn't directed at you (i would have quoted you). it was a general comment about setting limits.
i'm writing a symphony...i'm only using one note.