johnf04
Well-known
Here's a product of an early film from my Zenit 3m, in 1970. A friend with a darkroom thought this was good enough to print.
I love my Canon F1N. It was fun to use this solid camera. I used viewfinders allowing spotmetering. Nikon did not have any cameras with spotmeters.After a photography course I got a Leica M2. A secondary SLR I had the Canon-F1 that my wife loved.
My greatest love went to the M8.2. The colours. The ease. The fantastic pictures. Every shot a great shot. The haptic quality. And over a few years, 600 equivalent-rolls of Kodachrome in my hands.
I have a Sillette with the wide and tele lens. A seriously under rated camera.Agfa Ambi Sillette. Was called poor men's Leica, it was that good. Proper rangefinder, interchangeable lenses, three available: 35, 50, 90.
View attachment 4857360
Nikkormat FT2. I'd had the use of various family cameras until then but that was the first I bought with my own money.Which camera made you fall in love with photography?
The first films I developed and printed were from a microscope, so it was this for me too. Seeing that image appear in the developer. I still remember it.It was not the camera, it was the smell of the fixer in the darkroom and the magic of the silver. Cameras came later.
Amusingly, and back to my origins, I had an S45 that I used on a field microscope in the very early 2000s. Things have a habit of returning, often after an unpredictable absence.I'd like to say that Dad's Pentax ME or Minolta SR-T 101 hooked me on photography, and while he taught me the basics of focusing and handling with those cameras, it didn't really click (pun intended) for me until later. Nor was it the Kodak Disc camera I used for a little while when I was 13, nor Dad's camera magazines that he bought in the early 80s.
No, it was the Canon S45 digital compact that changed my life in 2002. And I do not say that with any sense of hyperbole - the ability to shoot unlimited decent quality images that could be instantly viewed on a computer was a true life changing experience. Suddenly, I was able to capture memories on the spot, with no thought of processing costs or time. It came with me everywhere, and I'd go out on purposeful photo walks, around the suburbs and into the City on what seemed like exciting and surreal adventures.
View attachment 4858682
Years later, I'm able to look back on those images to see shops and buildings that no longer exist, times out with family and friends, rural Victoria and overseas trips. This could have been done with film, but not with the same carefree profligacy that digital allows. The S45 allowed me to document my life in ways I'd never thought possible, and sent me on an odyssey which has lead to a rewarding life filled with photography.