Dear Alex. Yes! Finally someone said it out loud - you need a camera that makes you smile. I totally agree! For me it's my Yashica 12 and my Rolleicord III (I love TLR's). Every week I just wait for my free time to use it again. When it's on the shelf I like to look at it. Sometimes I just take it for a second in my hands to hold it for a moment or to look through the WLF. I really hope that you will find a camera that will make you want to use it with a smile. All the best!
When I'm between rolls I hold my Canon F1 and just fidget with it. The all mechanical sounds are wonderful and the feel of just holding it makes me want to go out and use it.
The one thing I love about photography is that the less you have the more you think! It’s the person behind the camera that takes the picture! The camera that puts a smile in my face and gives my hands a feel good vibe is my Fuji X100. Great video! Thanks!
Well said sir! And you’re not the only one judging by the enormous demand for the new Fuji X100VI. My pre-order is in. I was wondering what Alex would think of the X100 cameras. I’m hoping to really enjoy mine too.
This is always a popular topic. People always ask me what camera they should buy, I tell them that all the cameras today can deliver fantastic pictures. Choose the camera that makes you want to pick it up and go out shooting. Don't ignore the emotional input in your decision. In addition, before purchasing, put your hands on it. How does it feel in your hands, how accessible are the controls, how much does it weigh, etc. I've picked up some cameras that I just didn't like because of how they felt in my hands or the controls were just too hidden or funky.
Excellently put. I think any modern camera can make excellent images. Some are better at certain things than others. If those things are important to the (general) you, then pick that camera. But, it better fit you as well. ;)
Alex, I’m glad you mentioned cars in this video because that’s the first thing that popped into my mind after cameras. I haven’t owned a car with personality since I wore out my 1965 Volvo 122S. I sold my Sony RX100 mk2 last year. I owned it three years and used it twice. A good camera that was totally uninspiring.
I once owned a Harley Davidson Roadking Classic...and it was a classic in every sense of the word. One day another owner sat on it and sat still for a very long time. Eventually he smiled and simply stated 'this bike has soul.' I think that is what you mean by those items that make you happy.
Funny as you should say this, as I was making the very same comparison with motorbikes too. Motorbikes make you smile... or they don't. There is nothing superior about any of them. Its how you feel riding them or looking at them... or both.
Totally agree. The camera that gets me excited to go out and shoot is my Fujifilm X-T1, lovely bit of kit to hold and use, and small enough to carry around!
I started with an X-T2 then went onto an X-T5 and I love them both. I can't bring myself to sell the 2, even though the battery life is not so good. To me Fuji has soul. The style, cameras, lenses, film sims. The way I feel when I pick it up to go shooting. All problems and stress are forgotten.
Years ago I had a cheaper Chinese twin lens reflex and I absolutely loved taking photos with it. It was so basic and yet so cool. Today I have a Nikon D810 which has been out for years but the quality of this camera, the feel of it, make me love holding and using it. I bought it new, 4 years ago and still love it. Thanks Alex.
Agree! I bought my D810 new when it was first introduced in 2013. Eleven years later, I still love the gorgeous images it produces and I have no desire to replace it anytime soon.
I had one of those, a Seagull TLR, it cost me £22 used, a year after my first SLR, a new Pentax ME Super that cost £125 but the image quality of the medium format over 35mm, was leagues ahead and I never looked back.
I use a D5500, my first and only DSLR. I often look at newer cameras, but 'm loath to change it because I know it intimately. Everything falls to hand without thinking, and shooting with it is like an extension of my hand. and It still surprises me with what it can do
The d5500 is a great camera, I have d3100 and it's my first camera as well. It feels good in my hand. Everyone tells me to buy a Mirrorless cameras. I find it difficult to let go off. 😊
Since I started to get into photography, I am using Fujifilm cameras. I have to thank the seller in our local store, who recommended me that system. I am still using Fujifilm cameras without exception and always enjoy going out with my gear. Sure there might be more capable cameras for certain situations, but I never came back from a trip or shooting disappointed about missed opportunities due to my gear. I now spend every free minute with photography and own a couple of bodies, even a medium format GFX 50R. But I also still have my first X-E1 here.
It's very reassuring to find people who think alike. I myself regret selling my Sony a37, which is very far from today's standards, but I liked it. I happen to be a moderator in a Facebook photography group, so when someone asks, "what camera should I buy?", I tell them "the one that feels right in your hands".
I recently bought the Canon AE-1 Program with couple of lenses all for under $200; and I couldn't agree more with you; the way it feels in my hand, and how it makes me want to pick it up and go shoot photos is just incredible for me. I really do not get that feeling with my amazingly beautiful high-end camera. I thought I was crazy until I saw this video. I AM NOT ALONE! ;)
My first camera was an A1 as well (when I was in the Navy in 1981). And it was stolen a few years later as well :(. After shooting with Canon for decades, I bought a Leica Q2 last year. This camera is the best thing that’s ever been put into my hands. I’ve never looked back and have never been happier. For me and my street photography, it’s all I e ever needed or wanted.
It's interesting timing for this video. I've seen a couple of similar videos in the past couple of days about the non technical aspects of camera gear. For me the digital camera that suits the way I work and I just want to hold off the Olympus E-M1 mk ii. I've recently got a Yashica 635 that I'm film testing. I enjoy the experience of the waist viewfinder and different way of working. I think that cameras (like cars) have a specific way they like to be used. It's just finding the 1 that works your way, does the job you want and feels good.
@@d.k.1394 I can't afford a Sony A1 or Canon R5. They are almost as expensive as a Leica M. But.... a used Leica Q or M is actually ok. A used Q is right now cheaper than the new Fuji x100vi. So its a matter of choice. The good thing with used Leica, is that they hold their value so much better than a new Sony, Canon or Nikon. I bought a used Leica M 50mm Summicron a year ago. They are still selling to that price. I sold some Fuji lenses. They sold to half the price compared to they price I bought them for. a couple of years ago.. Go figure...
Ive owned a lot of cameras over the last 5 decades, from large format, medium formats, film and digital, but for the four digital cameras I currently own, its my old Fuji XPro1 that gives me pleasure whenever I pick it up. Good video today, thank you
Best Gear Review I've seen yet. (After a few hundred reviews I've recently seen, oriented around vintage digital. (Nikon d200, 300, D3, 700, etc.) I have a d300 that I have lived a LOT of life behind. Getting back into photography for the joy, after 6 years out of it, I considered buying new gear (more mega's), mainly to run 2 bodies, one for my Nikon Glass, and one to run all of my Takumars from back in the day before I finally went digital. After weeks of agony, I bought another D300, which I already have .... Because it makes me want to go take pictures.
Enjoyed the video, excellent point. I sold all my Sony equipment a few months ago. Now I’m shooting with a Canon 5D Mark 1 and 2, with prime lenses. Enjoying it because it brings me back to what made me fall in love with photography originally. Also the tactile feel of the buttons, the shutter sound and the way that chunky body feels in my hand puts a smile on my face Every time.
Couldn't agree more with the subject of this video. Years ago (in the film days) I used the Olympus OM 1, 2 & 4 constantly. I grew to use them without thought, almost as a reflex action. When I came back to photography seriously after a long break, I started with a Canon 50D and over time graduated to the 5DSr. But one day looking online I found a used EOS1D-Mark 3 for sale and took the chance on it. What a beautiful camera to use. I love the touch, the tactile feel, the balance, the position of all the controls and the weight. It's a heavy camera no doubt but it always performs beautifully. The results are great even though the megapixel count is not that high, the "look" or result of the shot is outstanding.
An advice straight from your heart. Your advice is true for any equipment. It is not limited to just cameras. The new word you have invented, mechanicalness, is what brings a smile at least on your face if not on everyone else's face. You keep searching for it in every equipment. This one attribute that has kept film cameras, Royal Enfields, Jeeps, Land Rovers, mechanical automatic watches, propeller planes and paper and pencil alive. I think you can dedicate a video on "mechanicalness". If I would have defined "mechanicalness" I would define it as the purity of the equipment. So an electronic camera dedicated to single function of taking a good photo has the same mechanicalness as its old mechanical counterpart which could do nothing but just capture a nice photo.
Alex, great video and I loved the car analogy. Another valid comparison, at least to me, is audio equipment. Many people think the most important aspect of the equipment is the specifications while others point out the specs don’t necessarily tell you if something sounds good. Similarly the music source is debated and many love albums because they think the analog sound is more pleasing as well as the tactile experience. So, those emotional responses are true in many of our hobbies. BTW, I own a 2023 Camaro SS convertible and it does put a smile on my face!
Agree so much, I love shooting with my 62 year old Hasselblad SWC and my Canon F1, both clunky cameras that make a lot of noise. I have a smile on my face when I use them. Love your analogy to cars 😀
Hi Alex, fantastic video, totally agree with you, back in 1987 I saved up and purchased a Nikon FG, the feel of it and the sound of the shutter just made me feel good about my photography, stupidly, I sold it in 1991, fast forward to last year when I decided to buy another one, and the smile on my face now everytime I use it, 😊😊
I'd agree with you on the Nikon FG. I remember picking up one for the first time and I was astonished how bright the viewfinder was (I had a Pentax ME Super at the time). Years later, when people were ditching their film cameras for digital ones, I bought an FG. Not to use but as a reminder of cameras I had once lusted after.
Hi Alex, totally agree with you, always worked with a Rolliecord, loved the feeling, the viewfinder, you felt like a painter, that big screen under you eyes, and now I have these modern camera’s with endless possibilities, you lose yourself in all it’s functionality and there it became more of a technical approach. There is off course another side of the coin, you could say that photography was made more affordable for people cost wise, you can make a hundred or more pictures and trow the most away, which also makes you less concentrated to make the best out of it without concentrating so much and relay on you camera’s with there capacity of 50 shots per second. Always love your video’s which bring me back to where it’s all about, creativity.
Hi Alex, i enjoyed this topic, i have an older DSLR and it makes me smile. If i buy a new camera i think i will lose my smile. If it ain't broke don't fix it. Cheers Alex. 😊
In the seventies, thats when I started photography, it was the competition between Nikon and Canon. It took me literally ages to understand, that a film camera is only a black box and picture quality depends on the lens and the film only. And as today, the picture was finalized in the development process. Its almost never depending on the black box itself (technical problems aside) which is just letting the light fall on the film for a defined time. Tools must fit into your hands, they must do the job, they should be fun to use. The rest is personal choice😊
Yesterday, I just took out my Canon FT from high school, cleaned it up, put new batteries in, and some color print film. It was so fun to take a couple pictures, but I am being more careful with my selections.
I know how you feel about that older car, I bought an old pickup truck 1971 GMC. I love it and although it's not like the new ones at all, I love my old pickup truck. I just feel good in it. Camera wise I have always used Nikon cameras. I was using a D5200 but my friend moved onto Mirrorless and had a D7100 for sale so I bought it. I like both so I will keep them. Shooting mostly with the D7100 and getting great shots, So much of this older gear is at a low price and I'm loving it, buying lenses at half the cost for them because they are used. Enjoyed your video again, thanks!
This is spot-on! I got my start as a kid with an old Minolta Super 'A' that my dad handed down (unless you count an old Brownie box camera that my mom had) which I had packed away with slides, negatives and old contact sheets until losing everything in a fire over a decade ago. I recall well spending hours loading film on racks for processing when he opened up a photo lab in the early 80s (funny how one remembers the smells of film canisters and chemicals) before he moved on to becoming an accomplished professional photographer. Now my perceptions have changed, for even when I buy a new body or lens, I might get excited briefly, but they've become tools and a means to an end. It really IS about getting out and shooting, for when I buy the gear, it's not for pixel peeping or "wow-value" (I shoot Olympus, just as my dad did for years, and chuckle when I see the "mine's bigger than yours" arguments at times lol), it's about being creative. Do I neeeeed an old 911 to go shoot my landscapes and wildlife in the middle of nowhere in western North Dakota or eastern Montana? Probably not (though it would be fun! lol)... My old GMC is probably the more logical choice. :) Thanks for sharing the creative philosophy that exists once one gets beyond the gear comparison and actually gets out to shoot what they envision.
Alex, you never cease to amaze me with your ability to home in on the quintessential. Everyone here will laugh but the camera that puts a smile on my face is a zenit-e. I shot my first photo essay on that brick when I was 17. I still have the helios 44-2 that came with it. I still have the body in my museum, right beside my first photo school k-1000. I don't use it anymore but I do use the Helios.
A learning experience for me was when I changed camera brands! I am happy, but realised that this is a tool for expressing my vision. After 20 Years being loyal to one brand, I realised that it is a tool and the image is what is important and the process of making a photo! Thanks for this video Alex!
Every time I get my old MX and old box cameras down from the shelf I smile , can I afford film and developing if I could I’d smile more 😊. Thanks for the take on this aspect we all forget ,picture taking should be fun
I have the sony a7iv. I have been using a sony xperia for years, took thousands of photos with it, finally decided to make the move to my first camera and i get so excited to shoot. It feels so coherent and like a natural evolution of the phone i use daily. Its amazing how people can feel like with these different cameras and how they click differently with tech
Hi Alex, thank you for bringing this topic to the fore, 26 years ago I started with the famed canon A1, yes it did make me smile and with it I became a prolific photographer, snapping everything in sight, it cost me an arm and a leg in film and processing costs, but I had a lot of fun learning about photography. A few years later I got caught up in the digital age, and the ensuing "Camera arms race" and went through digital cameras like they were going to go out of fashion, always looking for the camera or lens that was going to make me a 'better photographer', well, that didn't work. 18 months ago I sold all my camera gear and decided I was going to re-learn photography and bought myself a Nikon D300, this camera has made me realise just how lazy and spoilt I had become from using digital cameras with all the bells n whistles. The Nikon D300 is a 12mp beast (with attitude) in my book. At first, it scared the beejeezus out of me, but it also forced me to 'think' about the technical approach to photography again, in much the same way that my Canon A1 did. Now I smile, and once again I am enjoying photography.
Alex, What a great video! Finally,… someone has the balls to tell it like it should be. Photography, and capturing images should not be drudgery. The camera(s) that got me really excited about photography turned out to be the first Fuji X100 (and I’ve owned every iteration since then). I loved to hold it, look through the viewfinder, and find and create images. I nearly wore the damn thing out. And then I purchased the next X100 series model and the excitement continued. I love its apparent simplicity, as I do not have to worry about carrying lenses, choosing a focal length, and wasting time NOT capturing images. Keep up the great work. Cheers!
Thanks for the video, Alex! My first decent camera was an Olympus OM-1 that I got in 1977, used, when I was 16. I loved that car=mera but gave it to a charity shop about 10 or 15 years ago, when I went digital with a D40 and now a used D700. But now, I'm thinking of dabbling in 35mm film again and I absolutely kick myself for ever giving away that beautiful OM-1. I could operate the controls instinctively and felt it was a little jewel. I love my D700, but it doesn't bring me the same level of joy the OM-1 did. Cheers!
Hi Alex, For me, the enjoyment of actually taking photos emanates from the analog controls and having to think about and adjust the settings to try to capture the desired result. Manual focus is more satisfying than auto-focus. A tripod helps me slow down and gives me time to think. I don’t want to take snaps and super sharp images will never be a Monet. Fujifilm’s X-T & X100 series have been a winner for me. Thanks for a lovely coffee-break type ‘chat’ video.
The instant I held the Leica M6 back in 1987, and the Mamiya 6 in 1990, I knew those were the cameras for me at that time. I currently shoot with a Canon 5D SR, because I project my images at 6’ x 8’ and the 50 MP sensor allows me to do that. I don’t see myself buying another dSLR ever again, unless this one breaks or gets stolen. But… the camera I got on a whim about 4 months ago, the Polaroid I-2, is the one that gets me excited to work with. Not so much because of the camera’s features or ergonomics, but because of the images it makes! That’s where the excitement, the quickening heart rate, the anticipation, the sense of wonder comes into play for me: the photographs I’m getting. They are unlike anything I’ve ever gotten from any camera I’ve ever used (and I had a SX-70 back in the early 80s). Regardless of make, or format, all the different cameras I’ve used over the past half century created variations of a theme: high image quality that faithfully record the world in front of my camera. I wanted something different. And boy does this camera deliver that! It was the only camera I took on my recent trip to Japan. The photographs I took with it are not at all what my dSLR would have given me. So, yes, that is an essential quality - use what gets you up and out, making photographs!
Interesting discussion. When I got my MX it was a camera that I had been dreaming about. I read brochures and reviews and played with them on shop counters. When I passed my exams, my dad bought me one and it came with its 50mm f1.7 and I was off. It became something I carried all day and I enjoyed. I discovered Pentax Spotmatics and they had a magic and m42 Takumars were cheap and made great images. The Spotmatics have a feel and a sound and are really zen like photographers cameras. They made me want to take pictures and immersed me in the craft. The Pentax bodies were great in the field and in the studio. I discovered Pentax SVs and these were cool. I made exhibition prints and exhibited work I produced with them. They felt good and the controls were in the right positions. I could operate them without looking. New cameras are less friendly and you have to come to them on their terms. I don’t pick one up and wander about collecting images. I need a reason to pick one up and, I end up being purposeful and then I put it down. It demands charging and negotiating menus and thoughts about whether what I shot is good enough. I can make great images with it but the personal connection is less.
I walked into ‘Arthur’s Photography, Belfast’ in 1981 and bought my first slr. He sold me a Pentax K1000 and replaced the kit lens with a 40mm prime. Naturally over the years I wanted more, bigger and better but the truth is that the best camera I ever owned was that one.
Great video Alex, I know exactly where you are coming from, I only bought my first camera in July last year. It was a Canon 1300D, I upgraded that to a 70D in January, and now I know more about photography. However, I've always wanted an analogue camera, I now have a few including a A1, EF & AV1 but I get more pleasure from my EF than anything and when it stops working I can use it for hammering nails into walls. it's built like a tank and nearly as heavy, but I don't see any sign of it stopping working, I've dropped it once and it works fine. I could not imagine dropping my 70d and it not falling to bits.
It’s funny to run across this video because I was just thinking something really similar… that user experience (which is SOO different for each person) is a greatly under appreciated part of getting you excited enough to take photos that you actually go out and take photos. For me, the 35mm Contax G series. Why did I ever part with that one?? The thing you mention about the sound and the feel of shutter reminds me of my first camera, a Pentax K1000. Dead simple, rarely talked about, and by some people’s definition a throw away. Yet I had SOOO much fun shooting with it when I was first getting started. Thinking about where I took it, what experiences I had, and the way the shutter snap sounded, are irreplaceable. I really love my Fuji X30 and my Ricoh GRIII and GRIIIx. So many good memories. None are the “best” or anything, it’s just how they clicked with me at that time and place. It made me excited about photography. Kudos for reminding us about this.
My 1st SLR was the Canon A1 and that was very satisfying to use. However, the camera I most enjoyed using was a Mamiya C330 TLR. That has a waist level viewfinder with a flip up magnifier. I used it exclusively for weddings. Built like a wood burning stove, no batteries, everything manual. It was so 'mechanical' A beautiful instrument. I'm not tempted to buy another one but it was a joy for ever.
My first "real" camera was a Zenit 12XP and I hear many people say here that's not a real camera. But I bought it soon after my elder daughter was born and I still have it now and when I pick it up it makes me think of the moments I caught with it through my young adulthood 30 or more years ago. Holidays, climbing events, family gatherings all with that cheap SLR and two lenses. I had it CLA'd once which was not that expensive and it works fine and I know I need to shoot it more again but it's a heavy beast so I find more often than not an excuse to grap a different camera. But I agree you need a connection with your gear you need to become a unit and if you pick it up after years that je-ne-sais-quoi is still there and wants you to shoot, just shoot and shoot. Thanks for another great insight and maybe my avatar puts a smile on someone's face whose camera does not 😇
So much of what you say in this video resonates with me Alex. I have the Canon A-1 and I cannot quite bring myself to sell it because of what you describe here. It just feels good. This is also the reason why I enjoy shooting my D500 over my Z6II - because of that "mechanicalness" you describe. It feels like a precision mechanism that is gratifying to operate. This is way my Olympus M-1 (not OM-1) feels - like a jeweled mechanism. I could go on to compare and comment on other cameras I have but I won't bore you. I have to say that your reference to the BMW resonates with me too. My first one was an E39 manual transmission car that just transported me to another realm while behind the wheel. Failed miserably at trying to explain this to my wife since to her these are all just tools to get from point "A" to "B" (her words, not mine). For her it is a chore, for me (with the 525) it was a joy. No other vehicle (other than another E39) makes me feel this way. Yours is the first video that I have seen commenting on this. I see from some comments below that it strikes a cord with many. The fact that you touch on areas and topics like this that others do not is why I will subscribe as soon as I complete this comment!
Thank you for that wonderful video. I think that any outcome centric activity having of course a competitive bias or mood will disintegrate anybody from the process of creativity. Only the stale lust of having outplayed somebody will remain instigating for another stale round. I remember hours on a canal when I was so engaged in looking and photopraphing that I missed to recognize that I had forgotten to put an SD-card into the camera. But it was one of my most beautiful time taking images....
Yep, you nailed it there. I use a Nikon D850 and to be honest it's just a tool that performs its job well. Doesn't bring a smile to my face when I use it though. However my old Olympus OM2n was an absolute delight as was my Mamiya 645. You faced an awkward situation when using either of these you had to be able to work round it, with the Nikon I just press a button here or there and no more awkward situation. The Nikon takes a lot of thought out of the process and thus some of the pleasure, sure it delivers but I feel like I'm missing something (a smile)
Yes I think I know what you are trying to say. As I am in the digital world an in awe of their capability I still think of the first good camera I owned. It was a MINOLTA SRT101. It opened the whole world of photography to me. Remembering the feel and glee makes me happy!
I've always wanted a late 60s model Chevelle SS. There is nothing like the sound of vintage American Muscle. I'm an engineer and loved my BMWs as well, but they were so different than the visceral feeling of a rumbling V8 that produced enough torque to roll the vehicle a little when it was revved. ;) I picked up a Nikon F2DS a few weeks ago. It's a brick but is all mechanical. I need more time with it to determine if it's a fit or not. But I love that it is a mechanical camera. Good video, my friend.
My Olympus Tough TG-6 which is "even tougher than I myself" makes me adventurous, puts me into explorer mode, and with its macro and micro focus stacking modes, makes me dive deep into worlds of wonders which I usually would ignore. This one camera inspires me. And is so (relatively) inexpensive and rugged that I never am afraid to use it in "bad" conditions. Using it, I feel relaxed and "complete".
I totally hear you and you're so right! A Camera or any other product you buy with the intention of using it often should put that smile on ones face. I Used to love Nikon Dxx cameras but when i switched to Sony it won't leave my hands (I Still fiddle with it while i'm in my home office even if I'm not taking pictures). Fun thing for me is that it's the same with computers and keyboards, I'm currently writing my second novel and for some reason I can't write a single word on my desktop computer but the words fly through my fingers on my old second hand laptop that gives me the freedom of writing where ever I am (as long as there's a power outlet close buy) :D
Spot-on! I'm a person who rarely has the chance to pick up cameras in person, while getting all my info (and excitement) from the web and its data hype. How many times have I finally gotten into a store to handle my dream choice only to say, "Meh." There's no knowing what machine will click for you until you pick it up in person.
I know what mean, I went professional, Canon F1, in 1971, just after it was released, I had an A1, the wife had an AE1, I loved the T90 because of the feel, and sound. I will admit, as someone who used medium format on weddings I tried, once, to do a motorsport event with a Mamiya C330f with a waist level viewfinder. I use an R5, but recently picked up a mint 5DsR. Using it with a Sigma 150-600 and 1.4x is brilliant, when I look at the images I feel good. A camera should be an extension to your body, you produce images almost without knowing it is there. It shouldn't matter what it is, as long as you feel it. There isn't such a thing as the best camera, only the best for you, technically you probably could not put a cigarette paper between most of them. Good video, your voice has a reassuring quality. I do feel a little jealous sometimes, my latest wildlife video so far has less than 30 views!
You really nailed it. I have many favorite cameras and I never go anywhere without one of them. Believe it or not my Crown Graphic is one of them. Even shooting cheap Chinese Black and white film it makes me feel like the Great Weegee whenever I carry it. The other is my Canon AE-1 program. I have had this camera since the 80s with it's 50mm 1.4 lense. The latest favorite that makes me smile with all the good vibes is my Zorki 1. For digital my favorite is a Canon 40D and 90D. The 40D for everyday fun and the 90D for business. The 1st 3 are my favorites. Yes the camera must have soul and feeling and when you look at it, it says let's go and play!
Excellent, excellent video. My camera has to make it a pleasure to take pictures. I have to feel a connection with my camera. It needs to be a partner with me not something that gets in the way. It is an important observation. It’s an observation that counters the often repeated fact that “the camera doesn’t matter”. If considering technical spec then no, the camera doesn’t matter. But how the camera fits your personal style, your methods, your emotional response…..then it does matter.
I started my photographic journey with a Yashica MG-1. I love that camera. Range finder cameras in general have a special place in my heart. Yes, I have had several SLR, DSLR, mirrorless cameras, but they just lack that special something. I found the Fuji X-100 series and that is my current "special" camera. The fixed lens, range finder style makes me want to take it everywhere.
So true, saying your camera should make you smile. The first 35 mm camera I shot was my father’s Ihagee Exa type 4. In the 80’s, I used a Contax 159MM with a winder and 3 Zeiss prime lens (25, 50 and 135 mm). Liked that combo quite a lot but as you can guess the infamous electronics on the Contax died on me. These days, I mostly use these lenses with an adapter on my Nikon D5200. Going out with my Yashica Mat 124G gets me smiling but on days I venture out with my father’s old Exa or his Wirgin Edixa-Stereo you’ll find me grinning like a darn fool. Thank's, Alex, for the work you put in your channel to keep us thinking and not only shooting out of habit.
"a grin on my dial" absolutely agree. I have been shooting with an OM systems Olympus OM-1 a great camera and I am happy with the results. BUT.... I recently looked at a Leica Q3, tried it out, bought it and it is a pure joy, my dial definitely has a stupid looking grin on it now. It is not as flexible as the OM-1 but the emotional gain from simply using the Q3 is for me so satisfying, and it is that satisfaction that I take photographs for.
The most important attachment for a camera is the photographer. ;-) There is something to be said about being excited by equipment. If you feel joy and satisfaction from using a piece of equipment then that equipment is likely to get used. Personally, I like variety. I like digital cameras and film cameras, but not just any camera. I like medium format TLR cameras. The feel of winding the film and the sound of the shutter. The look of the waist level finder. All very nice. I like 35mm SLR cameras that are capable. So Nikon f100, f4, f5. Canon 1N HS. I can use lens stabilization. I can auto-focus. Or I can tell the camera to do exactly what I want it to do. I have big hands and for whatever reason I feel much more comfortable with a battery grip. I also like Nikon and Canon full frame cameras (all with battery grips). I have Nikon d800e and D610, Canon 5D Mark II (regular and infra-red) and Canon 5Ds. I have no current desire for a mirrorless camera. Maybe some day in the future. I like special lenses. Vintage lenses, new lenses, telephoto lenses, portrait lenses. I like funny/unusual film like Lomo Purple, Ilford Delta 3200 and Adox II along with the more standard fare. I guess the bottom line is that I want to have fun when I am photographing. After a few years of experimenting to find out what I like, now I know. All that having been said, I think that equipment is the least important thing in photography. The most important thing is the light, and the eye of the photographer.
I am I Nikon shooter and have had 8-9 digital bodies over the last 11 or so years, but the one film camera was an ae1 program found in a relatives basement. Shot my first roll of film on it. Learned a lot about photography in general. I bought a zf but I would absolutely buy a canon digital ae 1 retro camera in a heart beat as well
Great! You have just put in proper words all that I have always felt - and I thought I was weird... Now I know that professionals can feel the same... Thanks! At least I know now why I love my smallest and less competent Nikon over all the big ones of mine...
Hi Alex, Thank you, for helping me understand the magic of holding the right camera. A couple of years ago, I thought it was time to upgrade to the latest and greatest mirrorless. When I held it in my hands, it felt artificial, I bought a duplicate of the SLR I already had, and loved, and have since added a couple of great lenes. They just feel right. One of my few regrets is trading away an F1, AE1, and a bag full of FD lenses 20 years ago.
Thanks, Alex. l love the channel! My first camera was a Canon A1. I still a have a FD 28mm and a FD 70-210mm. You have pushed me over the edge. I am planning to pick up an A1 and maybe a FD 50mm very soon, even though my Canon R5 still makes me smile.
I shot a Sony a6000 for a couple years and always loved it but was looking to spice things up so I got a D800 and I couldn’t stand how big it was! I returned it and got a little Olympus and that was great for a time but I could never get over the image quality. I’m a proud pixel peeper. So now I’m jumping back to the D800 and I can have enough fun with it until I can afford mirrorless FF or maybe medium format! I’m excited for the future.
I loved my old Rolleicord IV, hard to beat the image quality for film. The Fuji X100 cameras are so popular, but I use the X70 with the 28mm equivalent lens. It's so small, quiet and easy to use. I love the touch focus. I can hang it around my neck all day for street shooting, no problem. I like to set it up for square and black and white. Terrific image quality if increased sharpness in the menu.
Nice to know us photographers have emotional attachments with our gears, for various reasons. For me, Michael Kenna's pohotos are the game changer that fascinate me with 6x6 format. It looks aesthetically balanced on my eyes (others may prefer rectangle/panoramic). Kenna is a well known Hasselblad guy, I'm happy with the much simpler Rolleicord. Of course, this is not the typical "mechanical film cameras are superior". Sometimes I pick something more modern like Nikon F100 because having AF is fun. What? I happily embrace modern tech 😬 Well in the end, it's not always about the fastest AF, biggest resolution, X-axis IBIS etc etc but what makes you happy when holding the camera and thus inspire you to make pictures.
I sold my old Nikon D7000, because I didn't enjoy photographing with it anymore. I now have a Fuji X-T5 with those glorious SLR dials and lenses with aperture rings and now I enjoy photographing again!
Jeremy Parr this video has inspired me to go out and take photos I am have a canon A E 1 35 mm film I just love it thank you for sheering this yours truly Jeremy 😁📷
Hi Alex. I know just what you mean. I recently bought a second-hand Fuijfilm X-T3 and I love it! Maybe it's because I have the silver version and it reminds me of using my dad's old Olympus Trip film camera when I was growing up, but it definitely makes me smile every time I pick it up. I only have one lens, the 23mm prime (35mm equivalent) which some may find a little limiting but even this excites me as it makes me think more about the process of composing my shots.
Spot on. I started taking photography more seriously 10 years ago, when I dug up an old Olympus Trip 35 and from the first roll I was hooked. I quicky "upgraded" to a Canon FT QL SLR and many other film cameras since. Eventually, I thought that I needed a modern Sony, but never got on well with it. There was nothing wrong with the camera, but I just didn't like it. After it broke, I never replaced it and have only got film cameras now. Even printing was converted to a dark room. However, it's not just digital vs film as there are film cameras which I don't like that much. I've got some of the last film cameras from the early 2000's and don't really like them much. It's all about what you enjoy and gets you excited about taking photos.
Same impression when I take my trusty Hasselblad V and my (quite already old) Phase One medium format, and also the same impression when I have my old Phase One and my new Fuji APSC in hands. The thing is t hat with those old gears and films, you don't control everything you have to go from the point that the camera+film+processing proposes you and get creative from this point and those imperfections. Photography will never be the truth, but "only" a personal point of view. By the way, lots of thanks for your videos, you made me discover photographers I did know about. And also you made me come back to photo, as I share lots of your views on photo. With digital you can do whatever you want, so it is very difficult to choose a path instead of another. Constrains boost creativity. My old Phase One can't really get good images above 200 iso. but under 200 it outputs beautiful files. This limitation forces you to go out of your confort zone. There are some photos I could only do with films, even more with very outdated positives films. And for some other thing if I fix myself limitations (like shutter speed for instance) then digital can also be a wonderful tool. Ans for B&W I still love starting from the object (the negative) the camera offers me. I probably bought very cheap my Hasselblad when you sold yours ;). So thanks for that, bacause now those Hassy V are very expensive !
Decades ago I started photography with a Praktica MTL5B with a 50mm lens that was about as crisp as an uncooked tortilla, but I loved using it. Subsequently I moved onto Contax gear but they didn't make me a star. My digital Nikons now are quite old but I love using them. They fit. They work and I want to go out and do photography. That's the important thing.
So this! I bought a hardly used 5D3 a year ago because I felt I could get better action shots (my main interest is horses jumping fences). This would obviously be a better tool than my existing 6D - much more sophisticated autofocus and higher burst rate. But I have found that I much prefer the old 6D - it feels comfortable in the hand, makes a nice soft’ish clack and has great colour. The 5D3 feels nice (or maybe I think it does as a more “pro” tool) and takes great shots, but it doesn’t make me want to pick it up the way the 6D does.
I'm sticking to Pentax, because the cameras just deliver to me everything I expect from a camera. It's weathersealed, buttons and dials are where I would place them. The camera literally sticks to my hand, that's how good the grip feels. The menu isn't fancy looking, but straight forward. Actually I can operate it in complete darkness with no problem. I absolutely agree with your points.
Totally agree. Im never getting rid of my X-Vario, my M3, my AE-1, my old Russian rangefinders, my early Pentax CCD digitals .... each broken in their own little ways, but each one fills me with joy, because I know all their quirks. I work in software development, (have been for 40+ years now) and the same thing / same problem is prevalent there as well. So many people flooding into the industry, and they are all focused on the tools and the specs and the money. They will go with whats perceived as the most popular, or what pays the most. They pump out vast quantities of junk, and complain about how much they hate the work. There are a few that slip through the cracks though, and pick up the tools that make them smile. They create works of art with them.
I also loved my A-1 a lot. I took it all over the world. Manual focusing and than That shuttersound! I started with a zoom, but once I got the 50/1.4 I never used my other lenses anymore. Apart from the ‘hardware’ the biggest difference with todays photograpy is the fact that you only had 36 frames on a roll. I remember that I was in Berlin during the fall of the Wall in 1989 and for Some reason I only had 3 rolls of Tri-X with me! You better be sure that every shot is a good one then! 35 years later I use a X100F most of the time. Very nice camera, but you are right: it doesn’t give me that smile I got everytime I shot my A-1 back then.
Very true - I had to learn this over the decades (it was my "Canon EOS" phase that made it clear: I hated the EOS 50E and EOS 10, and later with the Sony A7). But there's more to it: The type of camera changes the way I shoot (that I learned with Voigtländer Bessa R and Leica M6 rangefinder cameras). Interestingly enough, a Leica IIIf and some old LTM lenses (from different manufacturers) is all that's left from my "Leica passion", and this one I'll keep (not that practical, and there's a problem with light "leaks" when changing the lens due to a shoddy shutter curtain replacement - but it works, and it makes me smile). That's also why I went with Olympus MFT instead of Panasonic, and stick to it (there are some more rational reasons, but the "feeling" is the deciding factor).
Great topic. Agree you have to find a camera that works for you and makes you want to take photos. For me it is the Fuji XT-1 and Canon 5D Classic. Colours from both are amazing and the shutter sounds make me smile. They also look great.
Easy choice -- Wehman 8x10 view camera. I no longer have it but it was, hands down, my favorite camera from 30-ish years of photography (I was a late starter.) Just the memory makes me smile. It did everything I want a camera to do and it did it in a way that makes me happy. I would have been happy with just that camera and the two lenes I had. There are other categories. I have an old Burke & James 5x7 tailboard camera which I absolutely hate. No, I despise it. If anyone asks,, "is that your camera?" I disown it.. I pretend not to see it. It's crude, it's primitive, it's been ridden hard and put away wet -- but most of my negatives from the past two years have been made with this camera and I don't think I could do without it. My 35mm and medium format cameras are all great cameras and work perfectly well, but most of the time they stay on the shelf. I look at them regretfully while picking up that old 5x7 monster, but it's the one I take. Psychologists probably have a field day with stuff like that.
I totally agree with you! Last year, I went mirrorless - after holding a Sony in my hands months before, I knew that I was not going to buy that one. Having read through spec sheets and so on, I was pretty much sure that a Nikon Z system would be my choice, as a friend of mine let me shoot with it and it felt nice. At the photo store, I also took a more or less equivalent Canon model into my hands and - wow! All my fingers automatically were at the perfect spots, the camera literally was glued into my hand! I revised my decision overnight and got “my” system. Another thing is a certain sense for nostalgia… I “learnt” photography with a Pentax ME super, and when I shoot film, I love to use exact this nifty camera again, just for the feeling and the sounds it gives me.
For me the camera that is definitely not best in class these days (was it ever?) but just gives me a smile on my face every time I pick it up is the Fuji X-T3. I think in general Fujifilm are pretty good at creating cameras that "feed your soul" rather than feed into the specs race, and I do see a lot of RUclipsrs having Fujis as as their personal project cameras (X100V, X-Pro...), as opposed to more spaced up cameras that they use for work. The funny thing is that I went and bought back a copy of the old film DSLR camera that I had as a teenager, together with the lenses that I had, I fixed it up so that it was in working order but then... I realised that while it was a nice piece of nostalgia sitting on my shelf, that was pretty much all it was doing. It definitely gave me a smile, but it was kinda for the wrong reason, so I decided that camera was better off with someone else who would actually put it to good use :)
Hi Alex, I still have my original first camera (Pentax MX) and it creates an emotional connection when I hold it. I chose my current camera based on how it felt in my hand. A camera needs to be an extension to my arm that creates a connection.
"A camera arms race," yesssss! Gear envy is real, man. There's the full-frame crowd and their whole "full-frame is better than crop if you're a REAL pro" trope that messes with me. And don't get me started on my conundrum over all the great, lightweight, high ISO-shooting mirrorless gear taking over the market, urrrgh. I'd love to hear a follow-up video specifically for when you are ready to upgrade your camera body. I'm shooting with an old Canon EOS Rebel SL1 crop sensor camera, and I can get some great images on it (due to my investment in lenses, but I'm sure if I bothered practicing with the kit lens I'd get some there too). I have a definite preference for low light and nighttime photography, so fast glass is essential for me. I find myself getting frustrated with the lack of wifi on this camera because it makes it harder to transfer images, but most of all the non-tilting LCD screen and the 9 autofocus points get to me. Otherwise, the camera's functions serves me fine. I've now dropped a bundle on not one, but two Sigma Art series f/1.4 prime lenses, some fun Lensbaby fx, and traded my Canon 18-35mm kit lens for the slightly better 18-135mm superzoom. I also have the Tamron 17-50 f/2.8. Is it time to swap out the body? I'd have to sell off lenses to do it right now.
I got into photography with a Nikon FE and it motivated me so much to take photos. Then the new ZF came out and it gave the same or better feeling. Now I don’t have to worry about distilled water, having to deal with missing shots while changing rolls, etc. I was a “digital sux” type guy and have completely reverted. Plus I can use lenses that are familiar instead of some plastic-y feeling modern stuff using the adapter.
My photography tutor at college taught me the only camera that mattered, is the one you have on you. So it makes sense following that logic to have a camera you want to take with you all the time. I have a few now, my primary camera a Nikon D601, my first DLSR a Nikon D50, an older Nikon F-801 and a most recently acquired a Zenith 12S from a friend whose father left it to him but he didn't use and didn't want it to go unused. Whilst I love all these camera, for various reasons I don't get to use the ones I enjoy most as much, and I still want to upgrade to the Nikon Z FC, not the best on the market by a long shot, but it would be my first mirrorless, and Nikon sell it in a beautiful mustard yellow which is a colour I love to adorn myself with, being smaller, lighter, and yellow means I'd probably carry it absolutely everywhere I go and that's what has sold the idea to me. But maybe I should just focus on finding more excuses to shoot the Zenit instead...
The true love for your gear is inspiring. I love my Land Rover Forward Control 101, my ‘52 Telecaster, my Rolleiflex and my Nikon’s FM2N and FE2 to pieces. Each day, over and over and the only moment we’ll part is the day I’m leaving this planet. Not a minute sooner!
I loved my Landrover Series II A SWB. Drove it around Europe for 3 months before having to sell it to buy a one-way sea fare to Cape Town. I bought another in Johannesburg. Fun times.
I definitely feel both sides of this. I have held on to my Nikon D5600 DSLR despite the introduction of mirrorless technology. Partially because I don't have the money to upgrade, but also because before I invest in a camera system and lenses I want to have them in my hands and see if they feel right. I'm afraid if I just order one from the internet that I won't spark that joy that my D5600 does. I love the way it feels in my hand on a photo walk. I also appreciate the flip side of the argument though. I've definitely felt the urge while in a rut to buy a new mirrorless camera and try to jump start my photography again. Not that new gear would instantly make me the perfect photographer or anything of the sort. But there is something to be said about being excited to play with your new toys!
Cameras that make me smile 😀 Rolleiflex 2.8f. Hasselblad cm500. Beautiful action, sounds and feel. Had these in the 1980-90’s. Sold them. However, I still have my Nikon FM2n from new. Around 1988-9? Still going strong. Excellent camera. My latest addition being a barely used second hand Nikon D850. Great camera, but a big learning curve to get the most out of it. I still use it in manual mode often. Every now and then find out more of its tricks. But as I’m a Nikon user since 1985, having used many different models throughout the years, it feels intuitive to get round the camera and equipment. I got a few s.h. Nikon flashes to go with the D850. i.e. SB 800 x2 & SB910. £240 for all three. Bargain. Excellent flashes. Btw. I still use my old SB24 & SB25 flashes from the 1980’s. I mention this as I always get a smile when I’m using them. Good video. Very relevant subject. Thanks. May the Force be with you.🌀 Jim🌀 (-: :-)
have a Z8 now but still very fond of my D750 ... first of all I like an OVF but beyond that something just right about it for me ... great sensor that I trust ... quick focus, meter is so good it can nearly be ignored ... I put it in full screen average ... Not a video camera by modern standards which suits me ... lovely to hold and just the right size ... I have a 700 too, but it's the 750 that sticks with me.
Came across your lovely video and you are so right. I recently resurrected my canon A1 loaded a roll of film, walked around Edinburgh, took some photos, got it developed and scanned and they are some of my favourite shots. How is that? It’s what you are talking about. Thanks. Jer
Dear Alex. Yes! Finally someone said it out loud - you need a camera that makes you smile. I totally agree! For me it's my Yashica 12 and my Rolleicord III (I love TLR's). Every week I just wait for my free time to use it again. When it's on the shelf I like to look at it. Sometimes I just take it for a second in my hands to hold it for a moment or to look through the WLF. I really hope that you will find a camera that will make you want to use it with a smile. All the best!
When I'm between rolls I hold my Canon F1 and just fidget with it. The all mechanical sounds are wonderful and the feel of just holding it makes me want to go out and use it.
Out of all my film cameras, my Yashica-12 might be my sharpest 3.5 lens. I love that TLR
The one thing I love about photography is that the less you have the more you think! It’s the person behind the camera that takes the picture! The camera that puts a smile in my face and gives my hands a feel good vibe is my Fuji X100. Great video! Thanks!
Well said sir! And you’re not the only one judging by the enormous demand for the new Fuji X100VI. My pre-order is in. I was wondering what Alex would think of the X100 cameras. I’m hoping to really enjoy mine too.
This is always a popular topic. People always ask me what camera they should buy, I tell them that all the cameras today can deliver fantastic pictures. Choose the camera that makes you want to pick it up and go out shooting. Don't ignore the emotional input in your decision. In addition, before purchasing, put your hands on it. How does it feel in your hands, how accessible are the controls, how much does it weigh, etc. I've picked up some cameras that I just didn't like because of how they felt in my hands or the controls were just too hidden or funky.
Excellently put. I think any modern camera can make excellent images. Some are better at certain things than others. If those things are important to the (general) you, then pick that camera. But, it better fit you as well. ;)
Alex, I’m glad you mentioned cars in this video because that’s the first thing that popped into my mind after cameras. I haven’t owned a car with personality since I wore out my 1965 Volvo 122S. I sold my Sony RX100 mk2 last year. I owned it three years and used it twice. A good camera that was totally uninspiring.
I once owned a Harley Davidson Roadking Classic...and it was a classic in every sense of the word. One day another owner sat on it and sat still for a very long time. Eventually he smiled and simply stated 'this bike has soul.' I think that is what you mean by those items that make you happy.
Funny as you should say this, as I was making the very same comparison with motorbikes too. Motorbikes make you smile... or they don't. There is nothing superior about any of them. Its how you feel riding them or looking at them... or both.
Totally agree. The camera that gets me excited to go out and shoot is my Fujifilm X-T1, lovely bit of kit to hold and use, and small enough to carry around!
I started with an X-T2 then went onto an X-T5 and I love them both.
I can't bring myself to sell the 2, even though the battery life is not so good.
To me Fuji has soul.
The style, cameras, lenses, film sims.
The way I feel when I pick it up to go shooting. All problems and stress are forgotten.
Years ago I had a cheaper Chinese twin lens reflex and I absolutely loved taking photos with it. It was so basic and yet so cool. Today I have a Nikon D810 which has been out for years but the quality of this camera, the feel of it, make me love holding and using it. I bought it new, 4 years ago and still love it. Thanks Alex.
Agree! I bought my D810 new when it was first introduced in 2013. Eleven years later, I still love the gorgeous images it produces and I have no desire to replace it anytime soon.
@@n1k1georgeVery Cool. I just watched a video where Steve McCurry used an 810. It's funny that it's not so popular. All the best.
I regret selling my nikon 810😢
I had one of those, a Seagull TLR, it cost me £22 used, a year after my first SLR, a new Pentax ME Super that cost £125 but the image quality of the medium format over 35mm, was leagues ahead and I never looked back.
I use a D5500, my first and only DSLR. I often look at newer cameras, but 'm loath to change it because I know it intimately. Everything falls to hand without thinking, and shooting with it is like an extension of my hand. and It still surprises me with what it can do
The d5500 is a great camera, I have d3100 and it's my first camera as well. It feels good in my hand. Everyone tells me to buy a Mirrorless cameras. I find it difficult to let go off. 😊
Since I started to get into photography, I am using Fujifilm cameras. I have to thank the seller in our local store, who recommended me that system. I am still using Fujifilm cameras without exception and always enjoy going out with my gear. Sure there might be more capable cameras for certain situations, but I never came back from a trip or shooting disappointed about missed opportunities due to my gear. I now spend every free minute with photography and own a couple of bodies, even a medium format GFX 50R. But I also still have my first X-E1 here.
It's very reassuring to find people who think alike. I myself regret selling my Sony a37, which is very far from today's standards, but I liked it. I happen to be a moderator in a Facebook photography group, so when someone asks, "what camera should I buy?", I tell them "the one that feels right in your hands".
Thanks
I recently bought the Canon AE-1 Program with couple of lenses all for under $200; and I couldn't agree more with you; the way it feels in my hand, and how it makes me want to pick it up and go shoot photos is just incredible for me. I really do not get that feeling with my amazingly beautiful high-end camera. I thought I was crazy until I saw this video. I AM NOT ALONE! ;)
35mm ?
My first camera was an A1 as well (when I was in the Navy in 1981). And it was stolen a few years later as well :(. After shooting with Canon for decades, I bought a Leica Q2 last year. This camera is the best thing that’s ever been put into my hands. I’ve never looked back and have never been happier. For me and my street photography, it’s all I e ever needed or wanted.
I can't afford leica
It's interesting timing for this video. I've seen a couple of similar videos in the past couple of days about the non technical aspects of camera gear.
For me the digital camera that suits the way I work and I just want to hold off the Olympus E-M1 mk ii. I've recently got a Yashica 635 that I'm film testing. I enjoy the experience of the waist viewfinder and different way of working.
I think that cameras (like cars) have a specific way they like to be used. It's just finding the 1 that works your way, does the job you want and feels good.
@@d.k.1394 I can't afford a Sony A1 or Canon R5. They are almost as expensive as a Leica M. But.... a used Leica Q or M is actually ok. A used Q is right now cheaper than the new Fuji x100vi. So its a matter of choice.
The good thing with used Leica, is that they hold their value so much better than a new Sony, Canon or Nikon. I bought a used Leica M 50mm Summicron a year ago. They are still selling to that price. I sold some Fuji lenses. They sold to half the price compared to they price I bought them for. a couple of years ago.. Go figure...
@@andystiller3793I sold the em1ii for the Canon r6. It never puts a smile on my face like the Olympus.
Ive owned a lot of cameras over the last 5 decades, from large format, medium formats, film and digital, but for the four digital cameras I currently own, its my old Fuji XPro1 that gives me pleasure whenever I pick it up. Good video today, thank you
Same here. My X-Pro1just feels great to use, even compared to newer, much more expensive options.
Best Gear Review I've seen yet.
(After a few hundred reviews I've recently seen, oriented around vintage digital. (Nikon d200, 300, D3, 700, etc.)
I have a d300 that I have lived a LOT of life behind. Getting back into photography for the joy, after 6 years out of it, I considered buying new gear (more mega's), mainly to run 2 bodies, one for my Nikon Glass, and one to run all of my Takumars from back in the day before I finally went digital.
After weeks of agony, I bought another D300, which I already have ....
Because it makes me want to go take pictures.
Enjoyed the video, excellent point. I sold all my Sony equipment a few months ago. Now I’m shooting with a Canon 5D Mark 1 and 2, with prime lenses. Enjoying it because it brings me back to what made me fall in love with photography originally. Also the tactile feel of the buttons, the shutter sound and the way that chunky body feels in my hand puts a smile on my face
Every time.
Those cameras have beautiful rendering.
Couldn't agree more with the subject of this video. Years ago (in the film days) I used the Olympus OM 1, 2 & 4 constantly. I grew to use them without thought, almost as a reflex action.
When I came back to photography seriously after a long break, I started with a Canon 50D and over time graduated to the 5DSr.
But one day looking online I found a used EOS1D-Mark 3 for sale and took the chance on it. What a beautiful camera to use. I love the touch, the tactile feel, the balance, the position of all the controls and the weight. It's a heavy camera no doubt but it always performs beautifully. The results are great even though the megapixel count is not that high, the "look" or result of the shot is outstanding.
An advice straight from your heart. Your advice is true for any equipment. It is not limited to just cameras. The new word you have invented, mechanicalness, is what brings a smile at least on your face if not on everyone else's face. You keep searching for it in every equipment. This one attribute that has kept film cameras, Royal Enfields, Jeeps, Land Rovers, mechanical automatic watches, propeller planes and paper and pencil alive. I think you can dedicate a video on "mechanicalness". If I would have defined "mechanicalness" I would define it as the purity of the equipment. So an electronic camera dedicated to single function of taking a good photo has the same mechanicalness as its old mechanical counterpart which could do nothing but just capture a nice photo.
Alex, great video and I loved the car analogy. Another valid comparison, at least to me, is audio equipment. Many people think the most important aspect of the equipment is the specifications while others point out the specs don’t necessarily tell you if something sounds good. Similarly the music source is debated and many love albums because they think the analog sound is more pleasing as well as the tactile experience. So, those emotional responses are true in many of our hobbies.
BTW, I own a 2023 Camaro SS convertible and it does put a smile on my face!
Agree so much, I love shooting with my 62 year old Hasselblad SWC and my Canon F1, both clunky cameras that make a lot of noise. I have a smile on my face when I use them. Love your analogy to cars 😀
Too many out there who think the best gear will make me the best. I know you don't say that and that's why I like this channel.
Hi Alex, fantastic video, totally agree with you, back in 1987 I saved up and purchased a Nikon FG, the feel of it and the sound of the shutter just made me feel good about my photography, stupidly, I sold it in 1991, fast forward to last year when I decided to buy another one, and the smile on my face now everytime I use it, 😊😊
I'd agree with you on the Nikon FG. I remember picking up one for the first time and I was astonished how bright the viewfinder was (I had a Pentax ME Super at the time). Years later, when people were ditching their film cameras for digital ones, I bought an FG. Not to use but as a reminder of cameras I had once lusted after.
My favourite camera of all time was the Olympus E-1, the DLSR. Great to hold in my hands, feels very reassuring, good ergonomics.
Hi Alex, totally agree with you, always worked with a Rolliecord, loved the feeling, the viewfinder, you felt like a painter, that big screen under you eyes, and now I have these modern camera’s with endless possibilities, you lose yourself in all it’s functionality and there it became more of a technical approach. There is off course another side of the coin, you could say that photography was made more affordable for people cost wise, you can make a hundred or more pictures and trow the most away, which also makes you less concentrated to make the best out of it without concentrating so much and relay on you camera’s with there capacity of 50 shots per second.
Always love your video’s which bring me back to where it’s all about, creativity.
Hi Alex, i enjoyed this topic, i have an older DSLR and it makes me smile. If i buy a new camera i think i will lose my smile. If it ain't broke don't fix it. Cheers Alex. 😊
In the seventies, thats when I started photography, it was the competition between Nikon and Canon. It took me literally ages to understand, that a film camera is only a black box and picture quality depends on the lens and the film only. And as today, the picture was finalized in the development process. Its almost never depending on the black box itself (technical problems aside) which is just letting the light fall on the film for a defined time. Tools must fit into your hands, they must do the job, they should be fun to use. The rest is personal choice😊
Yesterday, I just took out my Canon FT from high school, cleaned it up, put new batteries in, and some color print film. It was so fun to take a couple pictures, but I am being more careful with my selections.
My favorite camera. It's got simple controls without being overly complicated. I've put hundreds of rolls through mine.
I know how you feel about that older car, I bought an old pickup truck 1971 GMC. I love it and although it's not like the new ones at all, I love my old pickup truck. I just feel good in it.
Camera wise I have always used Nikon cameras. I was using a D5200 but my friend moved onto Mirrorless and had a D7100 for sale so I bought it. I like both so I will keep them. Shooting mostly with the D7100 and getting great shots, So much of this older gear is at a low price and I'm loving it, buying lenses at half the cost for them because they are used. Enjoyed your video again, thanks!
This is spot-on! I got my start as a kid with an old Minolta Super 'A' that my dad handed down (unless you count an old Brownie box camera that my mom had) which I had packed away with slides, negatives and old contact sheets until losing everything in a fire over a decade ago. I recall well spending hours loading film on racks for processing when he opened up a photo lab in the early 80s (funny how one remembers the smells of film canisters and chemicals) before he moved on to becoming an accomplished professional photographer. Now my perceptions have changed, for even when I buy a new body or lens, I might get excited briefly, but they've become tools and a means to an end. It really IS about getting out and shooting, for when I buy the gear, it's not for pixel peeping or "wow-value" (I shoot Olympus, just as my dad did for years, and chuckle when I see the "mine's bigger than yours" arguments at times lol), it's about being creative. Do I neeeeed an old 911 to go shoot my landscapes and wildlife in the middle of nowhere in western North Dakota or eastern Montana? Probably not (though it would be fun! lol)... My old GMC is probably the more logical choice. :) Thanks for sharing the creative philosophy that exists once one gets beyond the gear comparison and actually gets out to shoot what they envision.
Alex, you never cease to amaze me with your ability to home in on the quintessential. Everyone here will laugh but the camera that puts a smile on my face is a zenit-e. I shot my first photo essay on that brick when I was 17. I still have the helios 44-2 that came with it. I still have the body in my museum, right beside my first photo school k-1000. I don't use it anymore but I do use the Helios.
A learning experience for me was when I changed camera brands! I am happy, but realised that this is a tool for expressing my vision. After 20 Years being loyal to one brand, I realised that it is a tool and the image is what is important and the process of making a photo! Thanks for this video Alex!
I have changed from full frame nikon to fujifilm crop . I did not gel with the nikon , and i am happy with the fujifilm now. I really like your vlogs😊
Every time I get my old MX and old box cameras down from the shelf I smile , can I afford film and developing if I could I’d smile more 😊. Thanks for the take on this aspect we all forget ,picture taking should be fun
I have the sony a7iv. I have been using a sony xperia for years, took thousands of photos with it, finally decided to make the move to my first camera and i get so excited to shoot. It feels so coherent and like a natural evolution of the phone i use daily. Its amazing how people can feel like with these different cameras and how they click differently with tech
Hi Alex, thank you for bringing this topic to the fore, 26 years ago I started with the famed canon A1, yes it did make me smile and with it I became a prolific photographer, snapping everything in sight, it cost me an arm and a leg in film and processing costs, but I had a lot of fun learning about photography. A few years later I got caught up in the digital age, and the ensuing "Camera arms race" and went through digital cameras like they were going to go out of fashion, always looking for the camera or lens that was going to make me a 'better photographer', well, that didn't work. 18 months ago I sold all my camera gear and decided I was going to re-learn photography and bought myself a Nikon D300, this camera has made me realise just how lazy and spoilt I had become from using digital cameras with all the bells n whistles. The Nikon D300 is a 12mp beast (with attitude) in my book. At first, it scared the beejeezus out of me, but it also forced me to 'think' about the technical approach to photography again, in much the same way that my Canon A1 did. Now I smile, and once again I am enjoying photography.
Alex,
What a great video! Finally,… someone has the balls to tell it like it should be. Photography, and capturing images should not be drudgery.
The camera(s) that got me really excited about photography turned out to be the first Fuji X100 (and I’ve owned every iteration since then). I loved to hold it, look through the viewfinder, and find and create images. I nearly wore the damn thing out. And then I purchased the next X100 series model and the excitement continued.
I love its apparent simplicity, as I do not have to worry about carrying lenses, choosing a focal length, and wasting time NOT capturing images.
Keep up the great work.
Cheers!
Thanks for the video, Alex! My first decent camera was an Olympus OM-1 that I got in 1977, used, when I was 16. I loved that car=mera but gave it to a charity shop about 10 or 15 years ago, when I went digital with a D40 and now a used D700. But now, I'm thinking of dabbling in 35mm film again and I absolutely kick myself for ever giving away that beautiful OM-1. I could operate the controls instinctively and felt it was a little jewel. I love my D700, but it doesn't bring me the same level of joy the OM-1 did. Cheers!
Hi Alex, For me, the enjoyment of actually taking photos emanates from the analog controls and having to think about and adjust the settings to try to capture the desired result. Manual focus is more satisfying than auto-focus. A tripod helps me slow down and gives me time to think. I don’t want to take snaps and super sharp images will never be a Monet. Fujifilm’s X-T & X100 series have been a winner for me. Thanks for a lovely coffee-break type ‘chat’ video.
The instant I held the Leica M6 back in 1987, and the Mamiya 6 in 1990, I knew those were the cameras for me at that time.
I currently shoot with a Canon 5D SR, because I project my images at 6’ x 8’ and the 50 MP sensor allows me to do that. I don’t see myself buying another dSLR ever again, unless this one breaks or gets stolen.
But… the camera I got on a whim about 4 months ago, the Polaroid I-2, is the one that gets me excited to work with. Not so much because of the camera’s features or ergonomics, but because of the images it makes!
That’s where the excitement, the quickening heart rate, the anticipation, the sense of wonder comes into play for me: the photographs I’m getting.
They are unlike anything I’ve ever gotten from any camera I’ve ever used (and I had a SX-70 back in the early 80s). Regardless of make, or format, all the different cameras I’ve used over the past half century created variations of a theme: high image quality that faithfully record the world in front of my camera.
I wanted something different. And boy does this camera deliver that! It was the only camera I took on my recent trip to Japan. The photographs I took with it are not at all what my dSLR would have given me.
So, yes, that is an essential quality - use what gets you up and out, making photographs!
Interesting discussion. When I got my MX it was a camera that I had been dreaming about. I read brochures and reviews and played with them on shop counters. When I passed my exams, my dad bought me one and it came with its 50mm f1.7 and I was off. It became something I carried all day and I enjoyed. I discovered Pentax Spotmatics and they had a magic and m42 Takumars were cheap and made great images. The Spotmatics have a feel and a sound and are really zen like photographers cameras. They made me want to take pictures and immersed me in the craft. The Pentax bodies were great in the field and in the studio. I discovered Pentax SVs and these were cool. I made exhibition prints and exhibited work I produced with them. They felt good and the controls were in the right positions. I could operate them without looking. New cameras are less friendly and you have to come to them on their terms. I don’t pick one up and wander about collecting images. I need a reason to pick one up and, I end up being purposeful and then I put it down. It demands charging and negotiating menus and thoughts about whether what I shot is good enough. I can make great images with it but the personal connection is less.
Pentax rivals the Nikon F4 for reliability. SMC focal lengths are affordable & diverse.
I walked into ‘Arthur’s Photography, Belfast’ in 1981 and bought my first slr. He sold me a Pentax K1000 and replaced the kit lens with a 40mm prime. Naturally over the years I wanted more, bigger and better but the truth is that the best camera I ever owned was that one.
Shot my first wedding on a Minolta Autocord..always my “ go to” two and a quarter square with the lovely slide focus on the front and a joy to use.
Great video Alex, I know exactly where you are coming from, I only bought my first camera in July last year. It was a Canon 1300D, I upgraded that to a 70D in January, and now I know more about photography. However, I've always wanted an analogue camera, I now have a few including a A1, EF & AV1 but I get more pleasure from my EF than anything and when it stops working I can use it for hammering nails into walls. it's built like a tank and nearly as heavy, but I don't see any sign of it stopping working, I've dropped it once and it works fine. I could not imagine dropping my 70d and it not falling to bits.
It’s funny to run across this video because I was just thinking something really similar… that user experience (which is SOO different for each person) is a greatly under appreciated part of getting you excited enough to take photos that you actually go out and take photos. For me, the 35mm Contax G series. Why did I ever part with that one?? The thing you mention about the sound and the feel of shutter reminds me of my first camera, a Pentax K1000. Dead simple, rarely talked about, and by some people’s definition a throw away. Yet I had SOOO much fun shooting with it when I was first getting started. Thinking about where I took it, what experiences I had, and the way the shutter snap sounded, are irreplaceable. I really love my Fuji X30 and my Ricoh GRIII and GRIIIx. So many good memories. None are the “best” or anything, it’s just how they clicked with me at that time and place. It made me excited about photography. Kudos for reminding us about this.
My 1st SLR was the Canon A1 and that was very satisfying to use. However, the camera I most enjoyed using was a Mamiya C330 TLR. That has a waist level viewfinder with a flip up magnifier. I used it exclusively for weddings. Built like a wood burning stove, no batteries, everything manual. It was so 'mechanical' A beautiful instrument. I'm not tempted to buy another one but it was a joy for ever.
My first "real" camera was a Zenit 12XP and I hear many people say here that's not a real camera. But I bought it soon after my elder daughter was born and I still have it now and when I pick it up it makes me think of the moments I caught with it through my young adulthood 30 or more years ago. Holidays, climbing events, family gatherings all with that cheap SLR and two lenses. I had it CLA'd once which was not that expensive and it works fine and I know I need to shoot it more again but it's a heavy beast so I find more often than not an excuse to grap a different camera. But I agree you need a connection with your gear you need to become a unit and if you pick it up after years that je-ne-sais-quoi is still there and wants you to shoot, just shoot and shoot.
Thanks for another great insight and maybe my avatar puts a smile on someone's face whose camera does not 😇
So much of what you say in this video resonates with me Alex. I have the Canon A-1 and I cannot quite bring myself to sell it because of what you describe here. It just feels good. This is also the reason why I enjoy shooting my D500 over my Z6II - because of that "mechanicalness" you describe. It feels like a precision mechanism that is gratifying to operate. This is way my Olympus M-1 (not OM-1) feels - like a jeweled mechanism. I could go on to compare and comment on other cameras I have but I won't bore you. I have to say that your reference to the BMW resonates with me too. My first one was an E39 manual transmission car that just transported me to another realm while behind the wheel. Failed miserably at trying to explain this to my wife since to her these are all just tools to get from point "A" to "B" (her words, not mine). For her it is a chore, for me (with the 525) it was a joy. No other vehicle (other than another E39) makes me feel this way. Yours is the first video that I have seen commenting on this. I see from some comments below that it strikes a cord with many. The fact that you touch on areas and topics like this that others do not is why I will subscribe as soon as I complete this comment!
Thank you for that wonderful video. I think that any outcome centric activity having of course a competitive bias or mood will disintegrate anybody from the process of creativity. Only the stale lust of having outplayed somebody will remain instigating for another stale round.
I remember hours on a canal when I was so engaged in looking and photopraphing that I missed to recognize that I had forgotten to put an SD-card into the camera. But it was one of my most beautiful time taking images....
Yep, you nailed it there. I use a Nikon D850 and to be honest it's just a tool that performs its job well. Doesn't bring a smile to my face when I use it though. However my old Olympus OM2n was an absolute delight as was my Mamiya 645. You faced an awkward situation when using either of these you had to be able to work round it, with the Nikon I just press a button here or there and no more awkward situation. The Nikon takes a lot of thought out of the process and thus some of the pleasure, sure it delivers but I feel like I'm missing something (a smile)
Yes I think I know what you are trying to say. As I am in the digital world an in awe of their capability I still think of the first good camera I owned. It was a MINOLTA SRT101. It opened the whole world of photography to me. Remembering the feel and glee makes me happy!
I've always wanted a late 60s model Chevelle SS. There is nothing like the sound of vintage American Muscle. I'm an engineer and loved my BMWs as well, but they were so different than the visceral feeling of a rumbling V8 that produced enough torque to roll the vehicle a little when it was revved. ;)
I picked up a Nikon F2DS a few weeks ago. It's a brick but is all mechanical. I need more time with it to determine if it's a fit or not. But I love that it is a mechanical camera.
Good video, my friend.
My Olympus Tough TG-6 which is "even tougher than I myself" makes me adventurous, puts me into explorer mode, and with its macro and micro focus stacking modes, makes me dive deep into worlds of wonders which I usually would ignore. This one camera inspires me. And is so (relatively) inexpensive and rugged that I never am afraid to use it in "bad" conditions. Using it, I feel relaxed and "complete".
I totally hear you and you're so right! A Camera or any other product you buy with the intention of using it often should put that smile on ones face. I Used to love Nikon Dxx cameras but when i switched to Sony it won't leave my hands (I Still fiddle with it while i'm in my home office even if I'm not taking pictures). Fun thing for me is that it's the same with computers and keyboards, I'm currently writing my second novel and for some reason I can't write a single word on my desktop computer but the words fly through my fingers on my old second hand laptop that gives me the freedom of writing where ever I am (as long as there's a power outlet close buy) :D
Spot-on! I'm a person who rarely has the chance to pick up cameras in person, while getting all my info (and excitement) from the web and its data hype. How many times have I finally gotten into a store to handle my dream choice only to say, "Meh." There's no knowing what machine will click for you until you pick it up in person.
I know what mean, I went professional, Canon F1, in 1971, just after it was released, I had an A1, the wife had an AE1, I loved the T90 because of the feel, and sound. I will admit, as someone who used medium format on weddings I tried, once, to do a motorsport event with a Mamiya C330f with a waist level viewfinder. I use an R5, but recently picked up a mint 5DsR. Using it with a Sigma 150-600 and 1.4x is brilliant, when I look at the images I feel good. A camera should be an extension to your body, you produce images almost without knowing it is there. It shouldn't matter what it is, as long as you feel it. There isn't such a thing as the best camera, only the best for you, technically you probably could not put a cigarette paper between most of them. Good video, your voice has a reassuring quality. I do feel a little jealous sometimes, my latest wildlife video so far has less than 30 views!
You really nailed it. I have many favorite cameras and I never go anywhere without one of them. Believe it or not my Crown Graphic is one of them. Even shooting cheap Chinese Black and white film it makes me feel like the Great Weegee whenever I carry it. The other is my Canon AE-1 program. I have had this camera since the 80s with it's 50mm 1.4 lense. The latest favorite that makes me smile with all the good vibes is my Zorki 1. For digital my favorite is a Canon 40D and 90D. The 40D for everyday fun and the 90D for business. The 1st 3 are my favorites. Yes the camera must have soul and feeling and when you look at it, it says let's go and play!
Excellent, excellent video. My camera has to make it a pleasure to take pictures. I have to feel a connection with my camera. It needs to be a partner with me not something that gets in the way. It is an important observation. It’s an observation that counters the often repeated fact that “the camera doesn’t matter”. If considering technical spec then no, the camera doesn’t matter. But how the camera fits your personal style, your methods, your emotional response…..then it does matter.
My first SLR was the canon A1. I sold it for peanuts! I had a used Mamiya TLR 330 that I used for weddings. I loved it. Not a battery in sight.
I started my photographic journey with a Yashica MG-1. I love that camera. Range finder cameras in general have a special place in my heart. Yes, I have had several SLR, DSLR, mirrorless cameras, but they just lack that special something. I found the Fuji X-100 series and that is my current "special" camera. The fixed lens, range finder style makes me want to take it everywhere.
So true, saying your camera should make you smile. The first 35 mm camera I shot was my father’s Ihagee Exa type 4. In the 80’s, I used a Contax 159MM with a winder and 3 Zeiss prime lens (25, 50 and 135 mm). Liked that combo quite a lot but as you can guess the infamous electronics on the Contax died on me. These days, I mostly use these lenses with an adapter on my Nikon D5200. Going out with my Yashica Mat 124G gets me smiling but on days I venture out with my father’s old Exa or his Wirgin Edixa-Stereo you’ll find me grinning like a darn fool. Thank's, Alex, for the work you put in your channel to keep us thinking and not only shooting out of habit.
"a grin on my dial" absolutely agree. I have been shooting with an OM systems Olympus OM-1 a great camera and I am happy with the results. BUT....
I recently looked at a Leica Q3, tried it out, bought it and it is a pure joy, my dial definitely has a stupid looking grin on it now. It is not as flexible as the OM-1 but the emotional gain from simply using the Q3 is for me so satisfying, and it is that satisfaction that I take photographs for.
The most important attachment for a camera is the photographer. ;-) There is something to be said about being excited by equipment. If you feel joy and satisfaction from using a piece of equipment then that equipment is likely to get used. Personally, I like variety. I like digital cameras and film cameras, but not just any camera. I like medium format TLR cameras. The feel of winding the film and the sound of the shutter. The look of the waist level finder. All very nice. I like 35mm SLR cameras that are capable. So Nikon f100, f4, f5. Canon 1N HS. I can use lens stabilization. I can auto-focus. Or I can tell the camera to do exactly what I want it to do. I have big hands and for whatever reason I feel much more comfortable with a battery grip. I also like Nikon and Canon full frame cameras (all with battery grips). I have Nikon d800e and D610, Canon 5D Mark II (regular and infra-red) and Canon 5Ds. I have no current desire for a mirrorless camera. Maybe some day in the future. I like special lenses. Vintage lenses, new lenses, telephoto lenses, portrait lenses. I like funny/unusual film like Lomo Purple, Ilford Delta 3200 and Adox II along with the more standard fare. I guess the bottom line is that I want to have fun when I am photographing. After a few years of experimenting to find out what I like, now I know. All that having been said, I think that equipment is the least important thing in photography. The most important thing is the light, and the eye of the photographer.
I am I Nikon shooter and have had 8-9 digital bodies over the last 11 or so years, but the one film camera was an ae1 program found in a relatives basement. Shot my first roll of film on it. Learned a lot about photography in general. I bought a zf but I would absolutely buy a canon digital ae 1 retro camera in a heart beat as well
Bang On! Well said Alex.
Great! You have just put in proper words all that I have always felt - and I thought I was weird... Now I know that professionals can feel the same... Thanks! At least I know now why I love my smallest and less competent Nikon over all the big ones of mine...
Great Video. The Canon FT QL is the camera that does it for me. it was my first, a hand me down. Loved that thing
Hi Alex, Thank you, for helping me understand the magic of holding the right camera. A couple of years ago, I thought it was time to upgrade to the latest and greatest mirrorless. When I held it in my hands, it felt artificial, I bought a duplicate of the SLR I already had, and loved, and have since added a couple of great lenes. They just feel right. One of my few regrets is trading away an F1, AE1, and a bag full of FD lenses 20 years ago.
Thanks, Alex. l love the channel! My first camera was a Canon A1. I still a have a FD 28mm and a FD 70-210mm. You have pushed me over the edge. I am planning to pick up an A1 and maybe a FD 50mm very soon, even though my Canon R5 still makes me smile.
I shot a Sony a6000 for a couple years and always loved it but was looking to spice things up so I got a D800 and I couldn’t stand how big it was! I returned it and got a little Olympus and that was great for a time but I could never get over the image quality. I’m a proud pixel peeper.
So now I’m jumping back to the D800 and I can have enough fun with it until I can afford mirrorless FF or maybe medium format! I’m excited for the future.
I loved my old Rolleicord IV, hard to beat the image quality for film. The Fuji X100 cameras are so popular, but I use the X70 with the 28mm equivalent lens. It's so small, quiet and easy to use. I love the touch focus. I can hang it around my neck all day for street shooting, no problem. I like to set it up for square and black and white. Terrific image quality if increased sharpness in the menu.
Nice to know us photographers have emotional attachments with our gears, for various reasons. For me, Michael Kenna's pohotos are the game changer that fascinate me with 6x6 format. It looks aesthetically balanced on my eyes (others may prefer rectangle/panoramic). Kenna is a well known Hasselblad guy, I'm happy with the much simpler Rolleicord. Of course, this is not the typical "mechanical film cameras are superior". Sometimes I pick something more modern like Nikon F100 because having AF is fun. What? I happily embrace modern tech 😬
Well in the end, it's not always about the fastest AF, biggest resolution, X-axis IBIS etc etc but what makes you happy when holding the camera and thus inspire you to make pictures.
I sold my old Nikon D7000, because I didn't enjoy photographing with it anymore. I now have a Fuji X-T5 with those glorious SLR dials and lenses with aperture rings and now I enjoy photographing again!
Jeremy Parr this video has inspired me to go out and take photos I am have a canon A E 1 35 mm film I just love it thank you for sheering this yours truly Jeremy 😁📷
Hi Alex. I know just what you mean. I recently bought a second-hand Fuijfilm X-T3 and I love it! Maybe it's because I have the silver version and it reminds me of using my dad's old Olympus Trip film camera when I was growing up, but it definitely makes me smile every time I pick it up. I only have one lens, the 23mm prime (35mm equivalent) which some may find a little limiting but even this excites me as it makes me think more about the process of composing my shots.
Spot on. I started taking photography more seriously 10 years ago, when I dug up an old Olympus Trip 35 and from the first roll I was hooked. I quicky "upgraded" to a Canon FT QL SLR and many other film cameras since. Eventually, I thought that I needed a modern Sony, but never got on well with it. There was nothing wrong with the camera, but I just didn't like it. After it broke, I never replaced it and have only got film cameras now. Even printing was converted to a dark room. However, it's not just digital vs film as there are film cameras which I don't like that much. I've got some of the last film cameras from the early 2000's and don't really like them much. It's all about what you enjoy and gets you excited about taking photos.
Same impression when I take my trusty Hasselblad V and my (quite already old) Phase One medium format, and also the same impression when I have my old Phase One and my new Fuji APSC in hands. The thing is t hat with those old gears and films, you don't control everything you have to go from the point that the camera+film+processing proposes you and get creative from this point and those imperfections. Photography will never be the truth, but "only" a personal point of view. By the way, lots of thanks for your videos, you made me discover photographers I did know about. And also you made me come back to photo, as I share lots of your views on photo.
With digital you can do whatever you want, so it is very difficult to choose a path instead of another. Constrains boost creativity. My old Phase One can't really get good images above 200 iso. but under 200 it outputs beautiful files. This limitation forces you to go out of your confort zone. There are some photos I could only do with films, even more with very outdated positives films. And for some other thing if I fix myself limitations (like shutter speed for instance) then digital can also be a wonderful tool. Ans for B&W I still love starting from the object (the negative) the camera offers me.
I probably bought very cheap my Hasselblad when you sold yours ;). So thanks for that, bacause now those Hassy V are very expensive !
503CX + 50-100MP Digital backs.
Decades ago I started photography with a Praktica MTL5B with a 50mm lens that was about as crisp as an uncooked tortilla, but I loved using it. Subsequently I moved onto Contax gear but they didn't make me a star. My digital Nikons now are quite old but I love using them. They fit. They work and I want to go out and do photography. That's the important thing.
So this! I bought a hardly used 5D3 a year ago because I felt I could get better action shots (my main interest is horses jumping fences). This would obviously be a better tool than my existing 6D - much more sophisticated autofocus and higher burst rate. But I have found that I much prefer the old 6D - it feels comfortable in the hand, makes a nice soft’ish clack and has great colour. The 5D3 feels nice (or maybe I think it does as a more “pro” tool) and takes great shots, but it doesn’t make me want to pick it up the way the 6D does.
I'm sticking to Pentax, because the cameras just deliver to me everything I expect from a camera. It's weathersealed, buttons and dials are where I would place them. The camera literally sticks to my hand, that's how good the grip feels. The menu isn't fancy looking, but straight forward. Actually I can operate it in complete darkness with no problem. I absolutely agree with your points.
Totally agree. Im never getting rid of my X-Vario, my M3, my AE-1, my old Russian rangefinders, my early Pentax CCD digitals .... each broken in their own little ways, but each one fills me with joy, because I know all their quirks.
I work in software development, (have been for 40+ years now) and the same thing / same problem is prevalent there as well. So many people flooding into the industry, and they are all focused on the tools and the specs and the money. They will go with whats perceived as the most popular, or what pays the most. They pump out vast quantities of junk, and complain about how much they hate the work.
There are a few that slip through the cracks though, and pick up the tools that make them smile. They create works of art with them.
A thoughtful and insightful perspective ..... many thanks Alex!
I bought an A1 recently, I know what you mean about character. It’s a joy to use.
I also loved my A-1 a lot. I took it all over the world. Manual focusing and than That shuttersound! I started with a zoom, but once I got the 50/1.4 I never used my other lenses anymore. Apart from the ‘hardware’ the biggest difference with todays photograpy is the fact that you only had 36 frames on a roll. I remember that I was in Berlin during the fall of the Wall in 1989 and for Some reason I only had 3 rolls of Tri-X with me! You better be sure that every shot is a good one then! 35 years later I use a X100F most of the time. Very nice camera, but you are right: it doesn’t give me that smile I got everytime I shot my A-1 back then.
Very true - I had to learn this over the decades (it was my "Canon EOS" phase that made it clear: I hated the EOS 50E and EOS 10, and later with the Sony A7). But there's more to it: The type of camera changes the way I shoot (that I learned with Voigtländer Bessa R and Leica M6 rangefinder cameras). Interestingly enough, a Leica IIIf and some old LTM lenses (from different manufacturers) is all that's left from my "Leica passion", and this one I'll keep (not that practical, and there's a problem with light "leaks" when changing the lens due to a shoddy shutter curtain replacement - but it works, and it makes me smile). That's also why I went with Olympus MFT instead of Panasonic, and stick to it (there are some more rational reasons, but the "feeling" is the deciding factor).
Great topic. Agree you have to find a camera that works for you and makes you want to take photos. For me it is the Fuji XT-1 and Canon 5D Classic. Colours from both are amazing and the shutter sounds make me smile. They also look great.
Easy choice -- Wehman 8x10 view camera. I no longer have it but it was, hands down, my favorite camera from 30-ish years of photography (I was a late starter.) Just the memory makes me smile. It did everything I want a camera to do and it did it in a way that makes me happy. I would have been happy with just that camera and the two lenes I had.
There are other categories. I have an old Burke & James 5x7 tailboard camera which I absolutely hate. No, I despise it. If anyone asks,, "is that your camera?" I disown it.. I pretend not to see it. It's crude, it's primitive, it's been ridden hard and put away wet -- but most of my negatives from the past two years have been made with this camera and I don't think I could do without it. My 35mm and medium format cameras are all great cameras and work perfectly well, but most of the time they stay on the shelf. I look at them regretfully while picking up that old 5x7 monster, but it's the one I take. Psychologists probably have a field day with stuff like that.
I totally agree with you! Last year, I went mirrorless - after holding a Sony in my hands months before, I knew that I was not going to buy that one. Having read through spec sheets and so on, I was pretty much sure that a Nikon Z system would be my choice, as a friend of mine let me shoot with it and it felt nice. At the photo store, I also took a more or less equivalent Canon model into my hands and - wow! All my fingers automatically were at the perfect spots, the camera literally was glued into my hand! I revised my decision overnight and got “my” system.
Another thing is a certain sense for nostalgia… I “learnt” photography with a Pentax ME super, and when I shoot film, I love to use exact this nifty camera again, just for the feeling and the sounds it gives me.
For me the camera that is definitely not best in class these days (was it ever?) but just gives me a smile on my face every time I pick it up is the Fuji X-T3. I think in general Fujifilm are pretty good at creating cameras that "feed your soul" rather than feed into the specs race, and I do see a lot of RUclipsrs having Fujis as as their personal project cameras (X100V, X-Pro...), as opposed to more spaced up cameras that they use for work.
The funny thing is that I went and bought back a copy of the old film DSLR camera that I had as a teenager, together with the lenses that I had, I fixed it up so that it was in working order but then... I realised that while it was a nice piece of nostalgia sitting on my shelf, that was pretty much all it was doing. It definitely gave me a smile, but it was kinda for the wrong reason, so I decided that camera was better off with someone else who would actually put it to good use :)
Hi Alex, I still have my original first camera (Pentax MX) and it creates an emotional connection when I hold it. I chose my current camera based on how it felt in my hand. A camera needs to be an extension to my arm that creates a connection.
"A camera arms race," yesssss! Gear envy is real, man. There's the full-frame crowd and their whole "full-frame is better than crop if you're a REAL pro" trope that messes with me. And don't get me started on my conundrum over all the great, lightweight, high ISO-shooting mirrorless gear taking over the market, urrrgh. I'd love to hear a follow-up video specifically for when you are ready to upgrade your camera body. I'm shooting with an old Canon EOS Rebel SL1 crop sensor camera, and I can get some great images on it (due to my investment in lenses, but I'm sure if I bothered practicing with the kit lens I'd get some there too). I have a definite preference for low light and nighttime photography, so fast glass is essential for me. I find myself getting frustrated with the lack of wifi on this camera because it makes it harder to transfer images, but most of all the non-tilting LCD screen and the 9 autofocus points get to me. Otherwise, the camera's functions serves me fine. I've now dropped a bundle on not one, but two Sigma Art series f/1.4 prime lenses, some fun Lensbaby fx, and traded my Canon 18-35mm kit lens for the slightly better 18-135mm superzoom. I also have the Tamron 17-50 f/2.8. Is it time to swap out the body? I'd have to sell off lenses to do it right now.
I got into photography with a Nikon FE and it motivated me so much to take photos. Then the new ZF came out and it gave the same or better feeling. Now I don’t have to worry about distilled water, having to deal with missing shots while changing rolls, etc. I was a “digital sux” type guy and have completely reverted. Plus I can use lenses that are familiar instead of some plastic-y feeling modern stuff using the adapter.
Digital a branch of photography, its quicker, cheaper & disposable.
I just bought a Nikon F4 for $140 shipped from Japan and I am amazed. I am smiling!
My photography tutor at college taught me the only camera that mattered, is the one you have on you. So it makes sense following that logic to have a camera you want to take with you all the time. I have a few now, my primary camera a Nikon D601, my first DLSR a Nikon D50, an older Nikon F-801 and a most recently acquired a Zenith 12S from a friend whose father left it to him but he didn't use and didn't want it to go unused. Whilst I love all these camera, for various reasons I don't get to use the ones I enjoy most as much, and I still want to upgrade to the Nikon Z FC, not the best on the market by a long shot, but it would be my first mirrorless, and Nikon sell it in a beautiful mustard yellow which is a colour I love to adorn myself with, being smaller, lighter, and yellow means I'd probably carry it absolutely everywhere I go and that's what has sold the idea to me. But maybe I should just focus on finding more excuses to shoot the Zenit instead...
I love the Canon A-1. What a great camera to start with!
The true love for your gear is inspiring.
I love my Land Rover Forward Control 101, my ‘52 Telecaster, my Rolleiflex and my Nikon’s FM2N and FE2 to pieces. Each day, over and over and the only moment we’ll part is the day I’m leaving this planet. Not a minute sooner!
I like my FE2 more than my FM2n. I really thought it would be the other way around until I spent time with both.
@@tonyferrell3456 It’s like having kids. They differ, but you love them all the same.😄
I loved my Landrover Series II A SWB. Drove it around Europe for 3 months before having to sell it to buy a one-way sea fare to Cape Town. I bought another in Johannesburg. Fun times.
I definitely feel both sides of this. I have held on to my Nikon D5600 DSLR despite the introduction of mirrorless technology. Partially because I don't have the money to upgrade, but also because before I invest in a camera system and lenses I want to have them in my hands and see if they feel right. I'm afraid if I just order one from the internet that I won't spark that joy that my D5600 does. I love the way it feels in my hand on a photo walk.
I also appreciate the flip side of the argument though. I've definitely felt the urge while in a rut to buy a new mirrorless camera and try to jump start my photography again. Not that new gear would instantly make me the perfect photographer or anything of the sort. But there is something to be said about being excited to play with your new toys!
Cameras that make me smile 😀
Rolleiflex 2.8f. Hasselblad cm500. Beautiful action, sounds and feel.
Had these in the 1980-90’s. Sold them.
However, I still have my Nikon FM2n from new. Around 1988-9? Still going strong.
Excellent camera.
My latest addition being a barely used second hand Nikon D850.
Great camera, but a big learning curve to get the most out of it.
I still use it in manual mode often. Every now and then find out more of its tricks.
But as I’m a Nikon user since 1985, having used many different models throughout the years, it feels intuitive to get round the camera and equipment.
I got a few s.h. Nikon flashes to go with the D850. i.e. SB 800 x2 & SB910.
£240 for all three. Bargain. Excellent flashes.
Btw. I still use my old SB24 & SB25 flashes from the 1980’s. I mention this as I always get a smile when I’m using them.
Good video.
Very relevant subject.
Thanks.
May the Force
be with you.🌀
Jim🌀
(-: :-)
Great comments.
have a Z8 now but still very fond of my D750 ... first of all I like an OVF but beyond that something just right about it for me ... great sensor that I trust ... quick focus, meter is so good it can nearly be ignored ... I put it in full screen average ... Not a video camera by modern standards which suits me ... lovely to hold and just the right size ... I have a 700 too, but it's the 750 that sticks with me.
Totally brilliant vlog. Very true and thank you for sharing this topic.
Came across your lovely video and you are so right. I recently resurrected my canon A1 loaded a roll of film, walked around Edinburgh, took some photos, got it developed and scanned and they are some of my favourite shots. How is that? It’s what you are talking about. Thanks. Jer
Totally agree. Have to feel "at one" with ones machine of choice.