chrish said:
fountain pens? safety razors? bicycles? these are all things that i hope will last me 20+ years.
le creuset cookware, and her kitchen-aid mixer, are things my girlfriend probably hopes will last that long too.
Your GF has Le Creuset too, eh? Good on her. (She likely understands your "stuff" better as a result.)
Funny that you (and Joe) also mention razors. Over a decade back, I got tired of shelling out what I thought was a King's ransom for allegedly fancy triple-blade razor cartridges (Gillette Mach3 being hot at the time). With a little hunting, I tracked down a nice German straight-edge razor (a Pumaster, for the shavegeeks out here, and I
know they're here), and thus started my whole wetshaving adventure, even though all I cared about was a better and more cost-effective shave. I didn't realize there was a whole damn subculture blossoming around this stuff. The Pumaster got trashed while moving from one abode to another, unfortunately, so now I navigate my whiskers with a pair of Merkur double-edge razors that will likely outlive me. (Never mind the high-quality, dirt-cheap DE blades, and the far-better shaves I get as a result.)
Which (finally) brings me to cameras. I like the idea of a camera hanging around long enough for me to actually get seriously familiar with it (thank you, Andy). This takes good engineering, which frequently gets confused with technological embellishment. The last camera system I had before my Hexar-based setup lasted me nearly ten years. I'd like to think that what I have will last at least as long (about four years left on the clock here), hopefully a decent stretch longer. "It's the practicioner, not the tool" is a common refrain, but a lot of these people fret loudly over whether their printer/ink/paper/computer/operating system is "good enough." I've sorted all that other stuff out; what I want is a camera that's hardy enough to stick around long enough to be second nature to my hands and mind's eye, and for the last handful of years I think I've found it. The tools are important insofar as you find what works best for you and stick to it, rather than set off on a Quixotic quest for some fuzzy definition of "the best."
Get it. Use it. Show what you've done with it. Rinse. Repeat. For as long as you can.
- Barrett