kevbo
Newbie
Let me first say that I love photography. I get such a high when I get a good image or find what I thought was a so-so image turn out to be great. I think it's a drug for me. It also scratches that creative itch that my job doesn't.
I also (like a surfer) am on that hunt for the perfect photo (or wave). I believe that pictures are made by a photographer AND a camera - both matter in the end.
So I've bought my share of cameras over the last 5 years. Every time I got a camera, I participated in the respective community for that camera. I loved it and grew (I believe) as an amateur photographer. But I always heard these whisperings filtering down from above:
1. Obviously an SLR is so much better than a point and shoot! I got a Canon 450D. The pictures were gorgeous from my 18-55 EF-s lens. But wait, "primes are a lot better than zooms. Much sharper." Better photos? Bigger highs? I had to learn more!
2. I purchased an EF 50/1.4 before a family vacation and then took some stunning photos of my nephew. f/1.4 was a new world to me. My love for photography grew - those pictures gave me quite the "high".
2. But you know, I heard full-frame was the way to go. The DOF was nicer, the low-light capabilities were better. There was "just something more wonderful". Besides, the focal lenghts "were right" for 35mm! So 12 or 15 months ago I picked up a 5D2. I loved the color of that camera. Things seemed so vibrant. The movie mode was wonderful and I made some great videos of my girlfriend walking through a field of grain. I learned about lighting.
3. But I heard of these mythical lenses - the 135 f/2 being one of them. I picked one up and captured some absolutely gorgeous pictures of my parents. Here was the drug again - I got to capture brief fleeting moments of my family that I'll treasure for ever. It scratched my creative itch, even my geeky itch. It was wonderful.
4. But the size of that setup bothered me. People clearly don't react the same when a bazooka is pointed at them. I of course had heard of Leica and on a few evenings started looking through images at LFI. Georgeous photos. Stunning! I discovered Jeanloup Sieff. Amazing! These photos had something mine never had. Could it be the "Rangefinder" method? Could it be the mythical Leica lenses? And the camera was so small and manageable! I would cease to look like the weirdo with the mega-camera!
5. I got on a few lists, waited patiently a few months, and finally got a grey m9 a few weeks after a 50 summilux. I took this camera to a family wedding. My hopes were low - I wanted to shoot wide-open but expected my focusing skills at that aperture wouldn't be up-to-speed. Strangely, on my first outing with the camera, I got some photos that I absolutely love.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ekhall/
I loved the black and white versions of some of them. Gorgeous!
Anyhow, wishing to hear what others thought - wishing to learn more and get some critiques, I posted a few of them here to a forum. One of the replies contained this:
I've never been a sheep, I do believe that I love photography for the right reasons, for what it gives me and how it makes me feel. But doesn't it get silly after a while? This non-stop ladder?
K
I also (like a surfer) am on that hunt for the perfect photo (or wave). I believe that pictures are made by a photographer AND a camera - both matter in the end.
So I've bought my share of cameras over the last 5 years. Every time I got a camera, I participated in the respective community for that camera. I loved it and grew (I believe) as an amateur photographer. But I always heard these whisperings filtering down from above:
1. Obviously an SLR is so much better than a point and shoot! I got a Canon 450D. The pictures were gorgeous from my 18-55 EF-s lens. But wait, "primes are a lot better than zooms. Much sharper." Better photos? Bigger highs? I had to learn more!
2. I purchased an EF 50/1.4 before a family vacation and then took some stunning photos of my nephew. f/1.4 was a new world to me. My love for photography grew - those pictures gave me quite the "high".
2. But you know, I heard full-frame was the way to go. The DOF was nicer, the low-light capabilities were better. There was "just something more wonderful". Besides, the focal lenghts "were right" for 35mm! So 12 or 15 months ago I picked up a 5D2. I loved the color of that camera. Things seemed so vibrant. The movie mode was wonderful and I made some great videos of my girlfriend walking through a field of grain. I learned about lighting.
3. But I heard of these mythical lenses - the 135 f/2 being one of them. I picked one up and captured some absolutely gorgeous pictures of my parents. Here was the drug again - I got to capture brief fleeting moments of my family that I'll treasure for ever. It scratched my creative itch, even my geeky itch. It was wonderful.
4. But the size of that setup bothered me. People clearly don't react the same when a bazooka is pointed at them. I of course had heard of Leica and on a few evenings started looking through images at LFI. Georgeous photos. Stunning! I discovered Jeanloup Sieff. Amazing! These photos had something mine never had. Could it be the "Rangefinder" method? Could it be the mythical Leica lenses? And the camera was so small and manageable! I would cease to look like the weirdo with the mega-camera!
5. I got on a few lists, waited patiently a few months, and finally got a grey m9 a few weeks after a 50 summilux. I took this camera to a family wedding. My hopes were low - I wanted to shoot wide-open but expected my focusing skills at that aperture wouldn't be up-to-speed. Strangely, on my first outing with the camera, I got some photos that I absolutely love.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/ekhall/
I loved the black and white versions of some of them. Gorgeous!
Anyhow, wishing to hear what others thought - wishing to learn more and get some critiques, I posted a few of them here to a forum. One of the replies contained this:
Oh for the love of God people. Even I, the camera addict, am starting to pick up on this! 🙂 I would imagine that after "old lenses", the next level is "You've got to shoot film" then "You need to shoot medium format - it's so much better"."There is a kind of gospel here at RFF that modern lenses are not appropriate for B&W..."
I've never been a sheep, I do believe that I love photography for the right reasons, for what it gives me and how it makes me feel. But doesn't it get silly after a while? This non-stop ladder?
K