vodid
Cone of Uncertainty
This general experience has happened to me quite frequently throughout my years as a photographer. I picked a camera and flash and went to an event tonite, but when I arrived there were LOTS of photographers.
This is an eccentric and creative crowd, a photographers dream...but beyond the visual aspect...these are my friends. I've been hangin' out with this loose conglomeration of folks for quite a few years. So, speaking JUST as a photographer, I've got the inside track. But I look around...
There's the Leica guy, the gal with the Holga, two photographers with Mamiya 7 medium format RF's, a lurking undercover professional photographer with a high-level point & shoot, an unabashed professional with a Nikon D3, lots of amateurs with low-level digital SLR's, a slew of amateur point & shoots, a video professional with a 3ccd camera, and lots of low level videocameras. All the photographers were cooperative and polite with each other, but that said, they were all aggressively stalking imagery.
I looked around, and thought to myself, "does this place really need one more guy with a camera? It looks like these varied photographers have got this event more than covered."
So I left my camera in the bag and didn't take even one photo tonite. Seems a little weird, given that I'm the photographer that is close to this crowd, eh?
This is an eccentric and creative crowd, a photographers dream...but beyond the visual aspect...these are my friends. I've been hangin' out with this loose conglomeration of folks for quite a few years. So, speaking JUST as a photographer, I've got the inside track. But I look around...
There's the Leica guy, the gal with the Holga, two photographers with Mamiya 7 medium format RF's, a lurking undercover professional photographer with a high-level point & shoot, an unabashed professional with a Nikon D3, lots of amateurs with low-level digital SLR's, a slew of amateur point & shoots, a video professional with a 3ccd camera, and lots of low level videocameras. All the photographers were cooperative and polite with each other, but that said, they were all aggressively stalking imagery.
I looked around, and thought to myself, "does this place really need one more guy with a camera? It looks like these varied photographers have got this event more than covered."
So I left my camera in the bag and didn't take even one photo tonite. Seems a little weird, given that I'm the photographer that is close to this crowd, eh?