Bill Pierce
Well-known
Cameras are like tools in a toolbox, different tools for different jobs. When film cameras dominated photography, learning to use different cameras wasn’t that difficult. A rangefinder Leica, and SLR Nikon or Canon, 2 1/4 SLR or TLR, a sheet film view camera - all had the same basic controls. Shutter speed, f/stop, manual focus and even film advance with the exception of the view camera were similar. And the handheld light meter - you probably used the same one with all your cameras.
Not so with our digital toys, even similar ones from different manufacturers - and once in awhile, different models from the same manufacturer. Mysterious multifunctional buttons and LCDs with long, scrollable lists of menu options are just different enough between brands and sometimes models that using multiple cameras, different tools for different jobs, requires the memory of a wise old elephant. Since most photographers are not elephants, using different tools proficiently enough to be able to think about what is in front of the camera rather than the camera itself has become a lot more difficult in the digital age. My answer to using different tools for different jobs is a little strange. If I find myself with some unexpected free time, I take out a camera and practice with it, annoying my wife and dog to the point where for my own safety I have to photograph in the back yard or go for a walk. Practice with a camera? I can hear film photographers laughing at me. What do you do?
Not so with our digital toys, even similar ones from different manufacturers - and once in awhile, different models from the same manufacturer. Mysterious multifunctional buttons and LCDs with long, scrollable lists of menu options are just different enough between brands and sometimes models that using multiple cameras, different tools for different jobs, requires the memory of a wise old elephant. Since most photographers are not elephants, using different tools proficiently enough to be able to think about what is in front of the camera rather than the camera itself has become a lot more difficult in the digital age. My answer to using different tools for different jobs is a little strange. If I find myself with some unexpected free time, I take out a camera and practice with it, annoying my wife and dog to the point where for my own safety I have to photograph in the back yard or go for a walk. Practice with a camera? I can hear film photographers laughing at me. What do you do?