A friend of mine did all his photographic work at the table, sitting in a wheelchair and a Hassy with a macro setup. There he did his art. Then he took a shot of that, real abstract art. What do you need. A camera, light, or lack of light, and an idea.
Darn skippy! A good internal creative voice will take someone who listens to it anywhere they can go, and good photos can be taken no further from home than the kitchen table. Thank you!
@@DavidHancock He makes a living from it, the pictures are sold in galleries around the world. No, he is not rich, but sitting in a wheelchair at home and taking pictures at the kitchen table. That ears respect.
The overall market in the 1980’s-on whether consumer or pro, the demand was for lighter and cheaper cameras. I used the 645 for a couple of years when I was moonlighting weddings. While the 645 didn’t have the durability nor consistency of the RB67’s I used in commercial work, The 645 was more than sufficient for the job they were marketed here in the USA , which was primarily the wedding photography market.
The essay was cool, but I couldn’t really concentrate on what you were trying to express cause I spent the whole dang video waiting for you to loop back around to the review of the camera which never came. This would’ve been better served as it’s own separate upload to the channel so that we could’ve gotten an actual proper review of the camera. I feel it’s dis-ingenious to clickbait folk into thinking the purpose of the video was to review the camera when that wasn’t the goal at all. I watch all of your videos on my Apple TV through the RUclips app and the app never displays the full title until you click on the video so I am aware that “Narrative Personal Essay” was included, I’m just speaking to the fact that you didn’t really review the camera so why even title it that and give viewers a false expectation of content? I do appreciate all of the work that you put into these videos and your dedication to making sure that everything you speak on is as factual as can be. I just hope at some point in the future we can get an actual review of the camera from you. 🙏🏾
Have you seen the complete video manuals that I made about this video that, taken with this, provide far more detail and insight into this camera than any other reviews I'm sweater of. If not, the links to those videos are in the description.
I always enjoy your videos. You are very knowledgeable and respect that knowledge: One criticism of this video which stopped me watching was the repatriation of that music: Others might not have a problem but I did. I look forward to your next video
Thank you and thank you for the feedback. Regarding the music, is it that the music choice was an issue or is it that the background music was either distracting, annoying, or drowning out my voice?
David Hancock David you do such a great job with your reviews and I so enjoy them: But the background music was annoying and distracting to the point I couldn’t listen any longer with this video: The same repetitive tune just got to me in the end:
Really loved this style of essay - nicely done and some great images here - I really love my 645 Pro - if I could have only one camera, it would be my choice - I think its blend of versatility along with great image quality and handling make it so
@@jviezel here you go: ruclips.net/video/nDzUXRrwdks/видео.htmlfeature=shared ruclips.net/video/kUgCtq9F6Ag/видео.htmlfeature=shared There are links in this video's description to the technical manuals.
A friend of mine did all his photographic work at the table, sitting in a wheelchair and a Hassy with a macro setup. There he did his art. Then he took a shot of that, real abstract art.
What do you need. A camera, light, or lack of light, and an idea.
Darn skippy! A good internal creative voice will take someone who listens to it anywhere they can go, and good photos can be taken no further from home than the kitchen table. Thank you!
@@DavidHancock He makes a living from it, the pictures are sold in galleries around the world. No, he is not rich, but sitting in a wheelchair at home and taking pictures at the kitchen table. That ears respect.
Confronting the absurd through creativity. A good reminder. Thank you for sharing the essay and photographs.
Thank you!
The overall market in the 1980’s-on whether consumer or pro, the demand was for lighter and cheaper cameras. I used the 645 for a couple of years when I was moonlighting weddings. While the 645 didn’t have the durability nor consistency of the RB67’s I used in commercial work, The 645 was more than sufficient for the job they were marketed here in the USA , which was primarily the wedding photography market.
Thank you! I didn't know how it was marketed and that's a great insight to have.
The essay was cool, but I couldn’t really concentrate on what you were trying to express cause I spent the whole dang video waiting for you to loop back around to the review of the camera which never came. This would’ve been better served as it’s own separate upload to the channel so that we could’ve gotten an actual proper review of the camera. I feel it’s dis-ingenious to clickbait folk into thinking the purpose of the video was to review the camera when that wasn’t the goal at all. I watch all of your videos on my Apple TV through the RUclips app and the app never displays the full title until you click on the video so I am aware that “Narrative Personal Essay” was included, I’m just speaking to the fact that you didn’t really review the camera so why even title it that and give viewers a false expectation of content? I do appreciate all of the work that you put into these videos and your dedication to making sure that everything you speak on is as factual as can be. I just hope at some point in the future we can get an actual review of the camera from you. 🙏🏾
Have you seen the complete video manuals that I made about this video that, taken with this, provide far more detail and insight into this camera than any other reviews I'm sweater of. If not, the links to those videos are in the description.
the aspect ratio of those images are the same as 6x7? sorry for my english
Nope. It has the same aspect ratio as 35mm.
Amazing pictures and your narrative for this was absolutely top notch Very accurate very motivating very insightful thank you thank you
Thank you!
I always enjoy your videos. You are very knowledgeable and respect that knowledge: One criticism of this video which stopped me watching was the repatriation of that music: Others might not have a problem but I did. I look forward to your next video
Thank you and thank you for the feedback. Regarding the music, is it that the music choice was an issue or is it that the background music was either distracting, annoying, or drowning out my voice?
David Hancock David you do such a great job with your reviews and I so enjoy them: But the background music was annoying and distracting to the point I couldn’t listen any longer with this video: The same repetitive tune just got to me in the end:
Really loved this style of essay - nicely done and some great images here - I really love my 645 Pro - if I could have only one camera, it would be my choice - I think its blend of versatility along with great image quality and handling make it so
Thank you! These are definitely great cameras, any (relatively minor) flaws aside.
Well said!
Thank you!
What a video essay!
Thank you!
♥️♥️♥️♥️♥️👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼👏🏼
Thank you!
Where is the blasted "REVIEW"
It's this video paired with the instructional manuals.
Maybe next time you review a camera, you'll actually talk about the camera?
@@jviezel here you go:
ruclips.net/video/nDzUXRrwdks/видео.htmlfeature=shared
ruclips.net/video/kUgCtq9F6Ag/видео.htmlfeature=shared
There are links in this video's description to the technical manuals.