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Veteran
@Erik van Straten and his images got me rethinking what a 'camera for life' means. His images have been taken over decades using a mix of older and newer films camera including the Leica 1a, Leica 2, M2, M3, MP and the Nikkormat FTN. Probably more. That such cameras continue to work after decades is inspiring and surprising.
It makes me wonder, what is a camera for life, and can a digital camera be such a thing?
I like to think that my M9 is a camera for life, as long as batteries continue to be available and it doesn't crap out. But there may come a time when it is no longer reparable. Leica no longer replaces the sensor or LCD screens of the M8 or M9, I believe. My Canon 5D Mark II is over 17 years old and still going, but I don't like the image quality and experience enough for it to be a regular companion.
A film camera with little to no electronic components could conceivably outlast some of us. M3? M4-P? MP or MA? Documentary photographer Patrick Brown recently posted his own repairs of three of his Nikon FM2 bodies on his Instagram stories. These cameras seem to last and last. But film is subject to costs and availability, not to mention chemical waste and storage. Unless you're a dedicated film shooter buying bulk reels, loading your own rolls and buying bulk chems, not to mention enjoying the dev process, it doesn't seem economically viable as a daily/companion camera.
If you had a camera that you could conceivably use for the rest of your life, what would it be, and why?
It makes me wonder, what is a camera for life, and can a digital camera be such a thing?
I like to think that my M9 is a camera for life, as long as batteries continue to be available and it doesn't crap out. But there may come a time when it is no longer reparable. Leica no longer replaces the sensor or LCD screens of the M8 or M9, I believe. My Canon 5D Mark II is over 17 years old and still going, but I don't like the image quality and experience enough for it to be a regular companion.
A film camera with little to no electronic components could conceivably outlast some of us. M3? M4-P? MP or MA? Documentary photographer Patrick Brown recently posted his own repairs of three of his Nikon FM2 bodies on his Instagram stories. These cameras seem to last and last. But film is subject to costs and availability, not to mention chemical waste and storage. Unless you're a dedicated film shooter buying bulk reels, loading your own rolls and buying bulk chems, not to mention enjoying the dev process, it doesn't seem economically viable as a daily/companion camera.
If you had a camera that you could conceivably use for the rest of your life, what would it be, and why?



