The Advantages of Using a Single Lens - Documentary Photographer Daniel Milnor

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  • Опубликовано: 27 янв 2025

Комментарии • 558

  • @GoodLifeInSpain
    @GoodLifeInSpain 5 лет назад +8

    I did pretty much the same thing on a recent trip to India. Shot Fuji XT-2 and 50mm f/2. One body. One lens. I had major anxiety about this, but decided to trust my nearly 40 years of professional experience. Like Daniel said, I had access to almost anywhere I went and nobody got camera shy. Each night I would edit and each night I was rewarded with great images. And...on top of that, my back never got sore!

  • @RodClark
    @RodClark 5 лет назад +9

    I agree 1000%. I spent 6 years between 2012 and 2018 solely dedicated to the 50mm lens and the body of work I created was the best of my career. You just begin to compose the shot in your mind and see the world as a potential photograph when you're limited to a single focal length.

  • @thelegendrubyrodd
    @thelegendrubyrodd 4 года назад +26

    That last line is my life. 1 camera. 1 lens. Big memory card and some good walking shoes. That's how I do it.

  • @ncsa197
    @ncsa197 5 лет назад +6

    I did just what is suggested yesterday; as I was finding things to photograph, people paid no attention to me at all (just what I wanted). Imagine how smart I feel now that I watched this. Once again, the idea of keeping things very simple is shown to be a very effective technique. Looking forward to more of your suggestions.

  • @groupcaptainbonzo
    @groupcaptainbonzo 5 лет назад +7

    In total agreement. I shoot with a
    Leica Q. There is only the one lens. So you have no choice but to learn it inside out. And absolutely no fumbling . Not ALWAYS convenient. But always ready

  • @Pascal15B
    @Pascal15B 5 лет назад +14

    As a camera dealer in N. Ireland, some of my customers do not understand why, in their eyes, I would limit myself to one lens & one body. I always explain that it will let you “see” better & as you say, why spend time fumbling. Really enjoyed this clip. 😊

  • @tedmanasa907
    @tedmanasa907 3 года назад +1

    Still the most important photography content on RUclips. Great stuff for people who care less about the technology and more about the image.

    • @marcsilber
      @marcsilber  3 года назад

      🙏love to hear that Ted!

  • @danielgoody8636
    @danielgoody8636 4 года назад +1

    One of the best photography videos I've seen on RUclips. 👏👏👏

  • @KevinG-159
    @KevinG-159 5 месяцев назад

    Love this video! I've watched it before and will watch it again... Thank you!

  • @DragonEye1911
    @DragonEye1911 4 года назад

    The best photography channel on YT. This is experience personified.

  • @-grey
    @-grey 5 лет назад +2

    When I was between cameras I got accustomed to the 28 fov on my iPhone. I'm usually a 50 guy, but beggers and choosers. It really opened me up to being creative with a style, or consistent look. Now I shoot Fujifilm with the 50f2 because it's how my eye sees, and I find it more natural when pulling up the EVF. The 35f1.4 is still there for low light or nostalgia, but really it's that 50f2 that stays on everyday.

  • @juanmartinvilla7611
    @juanmartinvilla7611 3 года назад +1

    Good advice Daniel. Thanks!!. Greetings from Argentina!.

  • @RiverWhisperPrd
    @RiverWhisperPrd Год назад +1

    I love this commentary….well said

  • @vincentricketts6022
    @vincentricketts6022 4 года назад +1

    Seriously great video man. When I bought my camera 5 years ago I bought 1 lens- 50mm 1.4. I used this lens and this lens only for about 2 years straight before I considered buying another lens to have in my arsenal. I truly believe this helped my growth as a photograph so much. I had no choice but to use one lens, and because of this I naturally was able to give 100% of my attention in the moment. Kudos again to your beautiful perspective.

  • @w.c.dogside1204
    @w.c.dogside1204 5 лет назад +4

    I am literally in the process of down sizing my gear and this video was what I needed right now, thanks.

  • @chrishuang8763
    @chrishuang8763 5 лет назад +5

    I have been shooting DSLR for more than 15 years and also film SLR before that. Now, my most used camera for travel and street photography is my Oly TG4. It is so discreet and capable that no one really bothers me or consider me as a photographer. That's so liberating that I can get more shots that I couldn't do with a DSLR. For the focal length I just shoot at its widest angle which is 25mm equivalent. It is also one camera which I can take everywhere, even underwater.
    The best camera is the one which is always with me.

    • @loudandclearmedia
      @loudandclearmedia 5 лет назад +1

      The Sony A7 bodies are nice like that too. Put a small lens on the front and you just look like a tourist with a point and shoot when you're really packing a 42MP full frame.

  • @RandomLifeProductions
    @RandomLifeProductions 5 лет назад +10

    I love the Pentax Takumar 50 1.4.... love it......
    Still have no idea what I’m doing but love the lens...

    • @GreenMorningDragonProductions
      @GreenMorningDragonProductions 5 лет назад +1

      I love Pentax. I'm 51 and never owned a digital camera until last year. I've been shooting all summer on my Pentax qs1 with a single lens. You can see my stuff on my latest RUclips upload.

  • @capturedbyannamarie
    @capturedbyannamarie 5 лет назад +3

    I totally agree with this. I have learned over the last several years that zooms are definitely not my thing. This after buying and selling them all. I only shoot with the 35 mm lens 95 percent of the time for any work.

  • @sbai4319
    @sbai4319 3 года назад +1

    And that is exactly why I love this channel!

  • @truthseeker2797
    @truthseeker2797 Год назад

    Thanks for an intelligent, logical, informative presentation.

  • @Fablemahn
    @Fablemahn 5 лет назад +3

    you killed it, thanks mate

  • @animikhchakrabarty
    @animikhchakrabarty 5 лет назад +1

    beautiful video

  • @Glasshousebc
    @Glasshousebc 5 лет назад +7

    4:57 really resonated with me... I’ve been guilty of leaving photos in the digital arena. Thank you.

    • @DANIELMILNOR505
      @DANIELMILNOR505 5 лет назад +2

      Print is so important, not to mention fun. Print forces you to make decisions and apply critical thinking to your work. And it forces you to hone your editing, sequencing and design skills.

  • @dps6198
    @dps6198 4 года назад +1

    One would argue that it's better to have it and not need it than it is to need it and not have it.
    Before cameras with interchangeable lenses came along the standard was the 50 mm. Photographers took phenomenal images with the nifty fifty.
    I used a 50mm f/1.4 on my EOS 5D FOR landscape photography last week and I'm very pleased with the results.

  • @paulsehstedt6275
    @paulsehstedt6275 4 года назад +3

    Most of my time I follow your rule with the one body and one lens philosophy because it's the best way to shoot press pics. My 50/1.5 is almost glued to my M240. Beside of two extra batteries I also will recommend some extra high quality SD cards ;-) - You've got a thumbs up from Denmark!

  • @bakermantube
    @bakermantube 4 года назад +3

    I totally agree! A single lens will improve your photography, especially a 50mm or a 35mm lens in full frame terms. Mine is a 17mm 1.8 (35mm Full Frame) on a Olympus Pen-F.

  • @RamoArt
    @RamoArt 5 лет назад +2

    On a recent trip to the Czech Republic I shot inside a lot of abandoned buildings.
    I could only step back from the subject so much until I hit a wall inside of the buildings, so I was incredibly glad to have the cheapo 16-55mm kit lens with me.
    I ended up shooting almost everything at 16mm, even though 50mm is my preference as well.
    But while watching this video I realized that, even though I wouldn't have gotten those wide shots with 50mm, I would have gotten different shots.
    Maybe better ones, since I would have had to put more thought into it.
    You're definitely onto something here!

    • @DANIELMILNOR505
      @DANIELMILNOR505 5 лет назад +1

      That's right. Not better or worse, only different.

  • @ZachBie
    @ZachBie 5 лет назад +29

    Like Daniel, I went and got a photojournalism degree. I have a job that is completely unrelated, but continue to spend several hours a day working on my photography.
    I agree that less is more, but will be the in the minority as I disagree with only shooting with one lens. I travel with a Nikon FM3A or Leica body and then medium wide, normal, short tele lenses. Such as 28/50/100.
    I don’t change lenses unless I have made a specific decision and the photo requires it.
    But from a storytelling perspective, there are times when something as tight as a 50 can’t include all the elements. There are times when you can’t back up or move forward, and you need a wider or narrower field of view.
    Less is more. And I buy lightweight gear when I can, but one shouldn’t intentionally handicap themselves to the point where they are missing photos.

    • @DANIELMILNOR505
      @DANIELMILNOR505 5 лет назад +3

      Hey Zach, a PJ degree is interesting because being a PJ is so much more than making pictures. Sure, photographs are the backbone but being an observer, in general, is a great skill.

    • @DANIELMILNOR505
      @DANIELMILNOR505 5 лет назад +1

      I have an FM3T I forgot about.....such a nice little cam.

    • @milanmedek3555
      @milanmedek3555 4 года назад +1

      That 3 lens combo is my favorite too. Really good for traveling. Mine is joined with an FM2.

    • @ZachBie
      @ZachBie 4 года назад

      Milan Medek I just did a month-long trip through S.E. Asia. I took my Nikon FM3a and a 28 and 58. Worked great and was lightweight.

  • @andyb3090
    @andyb3090 Год назад

    Couldn’t agree more. I sold my Fujifilm XT2 with 4 lenses and replaced them with a Fujifilm X100V with fixed 23mm (35mm equivalent FF) lens and I’ve taken some of my best images with this setup. I never have to think about changing lenses or zooming backwards and forwards to get the right perspective so I can concentrate more on what’s happening around me. Less is more!

  • @jinksbaker
    @jinksbaker 5 лет назад +90

    Excellent. It reminds me of a couple of things...
    1) The man that wears a watch always knows what the time is, but the man that wears two watches is never quite sure.
    Less is more
    2) Printing - do it, do more of it, as it has a profound effect on you, your clients, whoever holds and sees it in the flesh.
    If you want to sell more prints, print them, let your clients hold them, but then take them away - more often than not, they will buy them.
    Great specs, what model Oakleys are they?

    • @gamasierra
      @gamasierra 5 лет назад +2

      so true. Loved the platitude about the watches

    • @andreika6681
      @andreika6681 4 года назад +2

      btw, the most precise modern quartz watches have actually 2 different quartz freq generators, for thermocompensation, a single quartz drifts too much in -40 - +50 temp range. oh, actually, a third element is event better, get a watch with that radio freq synchroniser with atomic watch signal... mean, you end up with a quite complex system in fact, not with just a plain single watch... oh, and with that quality watches, they will all show the same time up to a 0.001 sec precision, 2, 5, 20 of 'em

    • @phatcrayonz
      @phatcrayonz 4 года назад +2

      andrei ka nerd. Lol

    • @alexmetcalfe4668
      @alexmetcalfe4668 3 года назад +2

      Good advice Mr Baker

    • @marcsilber
      @marcsilber  3 года назад +1

      True indeed!

  • @kennethdickinson2591
    @kennethdickinson2591 5 лет назад +2

    I’m a committed “single lens” guy. Although I have several cameras, most of my photography over the last two years has been in either a Rollei 35 (40mm lens) or a Voigtlander Perkeo II (80mm lens, which is the 50mm “normal” equivalent for 6x6.) Not only are they single lens, they’re fixed lens.
    This was a great video, thank you for it!

  • @devtank
    @devtank 5 лет назад +1

    Apart from anything else, getting to know your lens allows you to imagine (previsualise) what your images are going to look like as a finished print before you even get to the location. This also applies to commercial work too, when discussing a job with a client, you can previsualise the images during that discussion and advise your client on whats likely to work and not.

    • @marcsilber
      @marcsilber  5 лет назад +1

      very good advice. Ansel Adams talked about visualizing the lens he would sue for a given image.

  • @boris.dupont
    @boris.dupont 5 лет назад +1

    I used to do like you students do in my Canon days. Now I use mainly my Fuji X100 or my X-pro1 with the 35mm f2 on and that's it. It covers 99% of my needs and my mind is free and I have fun and inspiration

  • @cheslavwolf1723
    @cheslavwolf1723 4 года назад

    I really liked your comments and photos. Just super. Thank you!!!

  • @nicolasarnoys
    @nicolasarnoys Год назад +1

    Love it ! I did shoot 24 mm on Nikon for years... After I discovers Leica Q. do all my personnal and professional photo with that. It's simple and when I am Up for taking picture I don't think at anything else.

  • @viatorcr
    @viatorcr 4 года назад +1

    Absoutely true! Thanks for sharing this

  • @BookYourImagination
    @BookYourImagination 5 лет назад +1

    You're so right about the lack of attention people with cell phones or smaller cameras get vs. the larger, more professional cameras. I'm still relatively new to photography, so I'm experimenting with different lenses. It's a great idea to stick with one body, one lens for a project, but my (inexperienced) sense tells me I still need to figure out what the one lens is going to be. So, for now anyway, I'm probably a lot like your students. Good video!

    • @marcsilber
      @marcsilber  5 лет назад +2

      Glad to help! back in the day we all learned with one lens (50) before moving along. Its not about how many lenses in your bag, it's about how you use them. Thanks for watching, stay tuned!

  • @Brian-Hansen
    @Brian-Hansen 5 лет назад +2

    So much truth and good advice.

  • @SteveKleinheider
    @SteveKleinheider 5 лет назад +2

    Awesome video and highly informative!

  • @jasongold6751
    @jasongold6751 2 года назад

    I mostly use the 50mm mine is very old, like me! I love knowing what's in my frame and on film. Less to carry. Great advice!

  • @jorgensen8
    @jorgensen8 4 года назад +3

    I agree and only carry one lens. A 24-70 zoom.

  • @davidcorbin9786
    @davidcorbin9786 5 лет назад +1

    Excellent message and advice. Thank you.

  • @MidsierramusingBlogspot
    @MidsierramusingBlogspot 5 лет назад +2

    I began serious shooting in the Sierra Nevada and started with the A7 and 35mm 2.8. It was a wonderful package and very portable. My main concern was the 35mm was not wide enough for the up close shots of lakes with mountains above them. I now have the 16-35 2.8 GM and the A7R3. More weight and bigger package but I can also shoot the photos cropped to give me even more versatility.

  • @PPYTAO
    @PPYTAO 4 года назад +1

    I used to take a bag with a full frame DSLR, the trinity of lenses, a couple of primes, a flash gun, everything else. Now MOST of the time I shoot with just an APS-C point and shoot and I’m taking better, more original photos than ever.

    • @marcsilber
      @marcsilber  4 года назад +1

      Simplicity always wins.

  • @neerajjaswal5991
    @neerajjaswal5991 Год назад

    so true. Great Video Sir.

  • @robertsherrow3627
    @robertsherrow3627 5 лет назад +1

    Much wisdom in what you say. I find that interchangeable lens cameras are both a blessing and curse to our profession. I consistently get more joy and artful renderings from shooting my fixed lens viewfinder than any combination of camera body and lens in my possession. I’m currently down to four prime lenses (25/35/55/85) and still believe that I have a couple too many.

  • @af4od02
    @af4od02 5 лет назад +1

    Excellent advice and video. Thanks.

  • @marcokalle2452
    @marcokalle2452 4 года назад +1

    Some people have all the gear but no idea... still a beginner, but happy my funds are not endless so i have to use what i got, forcing me to think about what i do. Great video!

    • @marcsilber
      @marcsilber  4 года назад

      Thanks that’s the very best way to learn.

  • @xavierathorne
    @xavierathorne 4 года назад +11

    And that’s exactly why I chose the Fujifilm X100 line.

    • @richardowen4558
      @richardowen4558 3 года назад

      Totally agree. Rutger. I currently have two X100S bodies, one with the TCL attached and one with the WCL attached.

  • @chrisperceval193
    @chrisperceval193 4 года назад +6

    Wise words! Love a 50mm - shot most of my pro work on one when I did that sort of thing. Went to Vietnam a few years back - took 1 x35mm body , 40mm f2 lens and a 85mm f2. Could easily have done without the 85! If you use a lens a lot you get used to how the world looks through that lens so you can almost see the shot before the camera moves to your eye. KISS

  • @mwales2112
    @mwales2112 5 лет назад +4

    Very good point.. I mostly shoot with one camera, one lens and really enjoy that more than a bag with a bunch of stuff in it. My Fujifilm X100F does what I need for what I like to shoot...

  • @2tedros
    @2tedros 5 лет назад +6

    I very much agree with you! .....I think too many of us are entirely became of expert wanna be cameras and half way forgotten the purpose of a camera. Can you imagine if writers have taken much of their creativity, of talking about pen and choice of inks and word-processor software ?

  • @fotolookconde
    @fotolookconde 4 года назад

    Thanks for sharing the concept

  • @dpurdie5256
    @dpurdie5256 5 лет назад +3

    You also learn to see through the lens, see the world at that focal length/POV/width of the lens. Also it limits you and forces you to get creative and not lazy to just zoom to get the shot. My first ever lens was the canon nifty50/plastic fantastic. Bought a body only and the 50mm, Love my 50mm’s

  • @paulasimson4939
    @paulasimson4939 4 года назад

    Such wise advice. Daniel just stopped me in my tracks and made me really think about the how and why. Simplify in order to see and be present.

  • @IamBlueDragon_
    @IamBlueDragon_ 5 лет назад +10

    My 50mm f1.4 never once been used (to photograph clients). Time to learn how to use it. Thanks for the inspiration.

    • @DANIELMILNOR505
      @DANIELMILNOR505 5 лет назад

      You will love it.

    • @elliegrace6410
      @elliegrace6410 4 года назад

      My 50mm 1.4 was my favorite lens when I shot Canon. I'm sorely missing it after switching to Sony.

  • @29jug11
    @29jug11 4 года назад

    Golden advice.....

  • @DarioBoriani
    @DarioBoriani 5 лет назад +2

    I concur. Thank you, Daniel.

  • @peterfaris3398
    @peterfaris3398 2 года назад

    I also experience the shift, where photographers are noticed much more than they used to be. Some photographers embrace this unashamedly with good results (letting subjects enter their space, etc.). I'm not so comfortable with this approach, and I now shoot street scenes when I travel, and am getting good results with a nikon z50 and the surprisingly good 16-50 kit lens. After years of on again/off again photography with a nifty fifty, I shot for 3 years with an x100f and my photography improved immensely. I gave myself permission to crop like crazy when editing, and this helped me learn a lot about composition (simplifying, isolating the subject, leading lines, etc.). With the zoom lens, I tend to shoot (approximately) at 3 focal lengths, wide open (24 mm equiv), at about 35 mm equiv, and zoomed in (75mm equiv). If I was to pick one (probably will in the near future), it would be a bit wider (say 28 mm equiv). I can usually move forward if needed, and I like the context the wider field of view offers.

  • @SebaKPaul
    @SebaKPaul 5 лет назад +7

    You have a good point, but allot depends on what kind of photography you are doing, there are shots i did, i consider good, or at least i love them, that i just couldn't make them without a zoom, and i talk about shots that i phisicaly couln't get closer, no possibility to zoom with my legs. Shots done from a rooftop for example.

    • @RANDassociatesinc
      @RANDassociatesinc 5 лет назад

      Seba K. Paul Of course it depends on the type of shooting and such a set of choices does assume a lot of field experience. I brought two lenses based on my knowledge of what I would need. Otherwise I would have taken a single lens! 👍

  • @dridar35
    @dridar35 4 года назад

    This is a really good reminder ! Thank you for the video

  • @peterholt3003
    @peterholt3003 5 лет назад +2

    I was taught by a guy called Earni Lattori in Rhode Island, that one lens is all you need. 'Use your legs to zoom in or out' he said. I always remember that lesson. Less is more. Be well, Pette in Blighty.

  • @andreeadobre3190
    @andreeadobre3190 5 лет назад

    Agree so much. I got an old film camera at some flea market like 10-15 years ago and just fell in love with its lens, a Pentacon 1.8 50mm. To this day 99% of what I do is with that lens, with an EOS adaptor. Used it in filmmaking as well. It's the smoothest thing ever and almost indestructible. Dropped it once and it broke a tile on the floor. Ofc this means manual focus forever, but I got used to it after so many years. Part of the beauty of using the same gear is that you end up knowing it so well and your muscle memory just syncs with it. I'm considering switching to a Sony mirrorless camera and there's no way I'm giving up on that lens.

  • @Poverello2001
    @Poverello2001 5 лет назад

    I agree with you 100%. I’m big fan of minimalist photography, that is using only a single camera and a single, fixed focal length lens. I often also use my lens on manual focus, too. It forces me to slow down my photography and get the shot right in camera rather than “run and gun” and fix my photos in post production.

    • @DANIELMILNOR505
      @DANIELMILNOR505 5 лет назад

      Some of the best work ever done was by a long person with a lone lens.

  • @brycenew
    @brycenew 4 года назад

    Powerful: ‘one prime and publish your work’ 🔥🔥🔥👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻👏🏻 And you told us what Daniel uses for publishing. Thank you!!!

  • @stephengregory6598
    @stephengregory6598 5 лет назад

    Thank you so much. Totally agree and have taken your advice on board. Have been sitting on the fence for a long time. Mind is now made up. Thank you.

    • @marcsilber
      @marcsilber  5 лет назад

      that's what we love to hear! Tell us how it goes as you're off the fence.

  • @dougg6467
    @dougg6467 5 лет назад +1

    Great advice, it’s about the composition and not the equipment. Thanks for sharing!

    • @luxinterna3370
      @luxinterna3370 5 лет назад

      its not all about the composition. its also about the perspective.

  • @HaiMainite
    @HaiMainite 5 лет назад +1

    Simplicity is perfection!

  • @63nuke
    @63nuke 5 лет назад +3

    I've used almost every Fuji X lens. The 35mm f2 is my favorite hands down.

  • @garyf4912
    @garyf4912 5 лет назад +1

    Thank you for posting this! Very thought provoking and eye opening.

  • @ucevrim
    @ucevrim 5 лет назад +49

    for me its 35mm. I bought and sold the same lens several times only to buy back again. That's home for me. I'm never selling that lens again.

    • @amonGustavo07
      @amonGustavo07 5 лет назад +2

      Is ur cam full frame?

    • @ucevrim
      @ucevrim 5 лет назад +1

      @@amonGustavo07 yes

  • @PerfectNormal
    @PerfectNormal 2 года назад

    Do you think this applies to documentary filmmaking too? Thank you very much for sharing your expertise.

  • @nerwin
    @nerwin 5 лет назад +1

    This exact reason is why I don't like focal length overlap. Each lens I have is for a certain purpose. When I had overlap, I never knew which lens I wanted to use and would cause a lot of stress. But now that I seperated all of them, I feel better and less stressful. Some have every lens and multiples of overlap and if that works than great but doesn't for me. I like to keep it simple.

  • @RANDassociatesinc
    @RANDassociatesinc 5 лет назад

    I 100% AGREE!! I had a big couple of projects last week and I had to make a similar set of choices: I chose to take a single body and TWO lenses. A 17-35 2.8 and an 80-200 2.8. It was the smallest rig I have ever travelled with. My images were seen internationally. And to your point...life was SUPER easy. I chose my biggest inconvenience to be lens swapping but anticipated it would be at a minimum; which it was. I even relied on the built in strobe vs bringing an external speed light. I also took all of my batteries and got on the plane. Easy Peasey! Did I miss any of my other lenses or the speedlight? Not one bit. Bravo!!! Thank you!! Happy Shooting, gang!

  • @sanwarzone
    @sanwarzone 5 лет назад +5

    Well said Daniel and really appreciate seeing the images matching the words.

  • @powerforward1955
    @powerforward1955 4 года назад

    As we say in certain vernacular, you are walking down my street with this video! Earlier this year (2020), I noticed that 21-yrs of my life and experiences were missing from film/photography. In Jan, I purchased an older Canon DSLR and began classes. But this time I thought, at my age I want direction and intentionality to my photos. So I decided, once I’m familiar w/ the basics again, I will primarily shoot Black & white and research one camera and one lens and learn them thoroughly. I have not invested in expensive glass because I knew my camera choice would change. I’m considering a used mid-range Fuji mirror-less and 50mm lens as my rig. I’m partial to the range-finder configuration. Thank you. Be well.

  • @richardowen4558
    @richardowen4558 3 года назад +1

    I started with just an Olympus OM-10 and Zuiko 1,8/50mm back in 1978. Eventually I had other bodies, shifted to fast f2.8 zooms and even spent a decade late in life as a freelance news shooter. Now retired, I have come full circle with a Fuji X100S w/TCL attached as my main camera and all the heavy pro gear I needed at the time is sold. Still struggling with it but your thoughts give me hope that it is the way for me to go at this point in my photography life.

  • @TheCompleteGuitarist
    @TheCompleteGuitarist 5 лет назад

    Thanks for sharing your story. Makes total sense. Aside from which, the gear should never get in the way of the process.

  • @paracuja
    @paracuja 5 лет назад +1

    The last 6 years i only used fixed lens cameras first fujix100s then x100F and now the Ricoh GRIII :) makes life so easy

  • @DJAnamaly
    @DJAnamaly 4 года назад

    Love this very straightforward concise educational and most importantly inspirational

  • @Grant_Seymour_
    @Grant_Seymour_ 5 лет назад +3

    I agree wholeheartedly about the suspicion that comes with using a "professional" camera these days. I find using a Fuji set-up actually makes many people more comfortable because the assume it is an old film camera. That said, if I show up to a public event with a Canon body like a 5d and a zoom lens people let me go where I please because I look "professional."

  • @klofisch
    @klofisch 5 лет назад +6

    i mostly use an Nikon F4 or F2 with a f2/35 Nikkor-H. It covers all my fotography on Street.

  • @walkingmanvideo9455
    @walkingmanvideo9455 2 года назад +1

    Stupid question but have to ask. When you refer to 50mm lens you are referring to a full frame 50mm lens, not a 35mm fuji lens on crop sensor that equates to 50mm?

    • @marcsilber
      @marcsilber  2 года назад

      Full frame. But same would apply to cropped-

  • @abdouloudi8190
    @abdouloudi8190 5 лет назад +1

    thank you for time

  • @gtaatmiami
    @gtaatmiami 4 года назад

    50mm is my favorite focal length. I use it for nearly all of my video projects and I’ve noticed I love it for photography too

  • @klinkhamerphoto
    @klinkhamerphoto 2 года назад +1

    One lens is perfect. I use mainly the 24-70mm f2.8. This allows for just about everything I shoot. Yes, its larger than a fujinon 35mm but I believe size of a lens doesn't really matter in the field. At least you dont fumble with equipment and will allow for more visual variation is the images. For a working pro a must. I get the idea of consistency, but you can also work that way with a good zoom. Keep up the good video's and motivational talks. Thanks!

  • @mundo6387
    @mundo6387 5 лет назад

    Nice message

  • @Subhash3271
    @Subhash3271 5 лет назад +2

    I have fun using X100f . No second opinion/ option available. To be sure of what I intend to, instead giving space for variables / doubts in mind. Lots of positives, minus flexibility.

  • @ekkanofiqandriyana7325
    @ekkanofiqandriyana7325 4 года назад

    this video inspired me a lot, i decide to simplified my gear a month ago and now i found this channel, perfect.!!
    instantly subscribe +1

  • @lifetimesofamultiplemediam1003
    @lifetimesofamultiplemediam1003 5 лет назад +1

    Excellent advice...

  • @Bob-Horse
    @Bob-Horse 5 лет назад +1

    Wise words, thank you.

  • @Ultrarmx
    @Ultrarmx 5 лет назад +2

    Awesome advice, TY for sharing

  • @israelh436
    @israelh436 3 года назад

    Love the tip. My online class feels like in every video

  • @Jack_huntakilla
    @Jack_huntakilla 5 лет назад +2

    Good stuff. Thank you for this.

  • @Seitenwerk
    @Seitenwerk 4 года назад +1

    I think it’s interesting looking back at my photography past, I basically started into it with the decision of just limiting myself to prime lenses and only a carefully selected few. The first lense I bought was the canon 50mm 1.4 and it changed my photography life. I still have it today and and it is still in perfect condition. Today, I have two other primes (one 35 and one 85). And I still mainly use the 50mm. Depending on the shooting location or my intention, I usually choose one and use it for the whole shoot.
    Others often wondered how I manage to shoot events and other stuff with just a single lense especially prime lenses but in the end they are often very surprised with the result. So far, I have never found myself in a situation where I wished I had a different lens.
    And I think this may be because by choosing a single lense, I am always and at every time fully aware of my composition and equipment. If something is about to happen at an event, I am usually already there at the right position an time, as I always know where I have to be in my mind.
    I think if I would have chooses a zoom lense it taken x amount of lenses with me, I would be less careful about what’s actually going on at the specific events, less „selective“ and I am sure that just because of that alone, esch photo would be of less quality and situational as it could have been. In the near future, I am going to exchange my 50mm 1.4 for a better one, but it will again be a 50mm prime again even if I was thinking about a 28-70 zoom. On paper it sounds amazing, but thinking about what I was blue to achieve with my prime (at the obvious benefits of a prime of course) I will stay on my path

  • @karlbratby4349
    @karlbratby4349 2 года назад

    Awesome advice 😊

  • @MrErboLIK
    @MrErboLIK 4 года назад

    This is the best video on photography that I have ever watched, I photograph portraits, but in our country they are not particularly ordered, all the usual crowd shooting, for this I bought sigma 18-35mm, but I feel that I did it in vain, I changed so to myself, my desire and goal to shoot portraits, due to the fact that one lens deprives you of a lot of problems, I agree to 1000%. It's better to earn less than to shoot something that you don't like!

    • @marcsilber
      @marcsilber  4 года назад

      Glad you loved it and it helped you advance!

  • @marcsilber
    @marcsilber  5 лет назад +12

    Thanks for the great advice Dan, and the stories of your trip! Do you have a combination of lens in camera that you like to work with? I'd love to hear about it.

    • @EAC.AtithJtha
      @EAC.AtithJtha 5 лет назад +1

      Nikon D3400 18-55mm

    • @estebandupinet
      @estebandupinet 5 лет назад +2

      For documentary photohraphy I love the 28mm because, in my opinion, it has the perfect range to do portraits, landscapes and architecture

    • @Bob-Horse
      @Bob-Horse 5 лет назад

      Advancing Your Photography - for my limited photography due to my disability confining me to bed a lot, what I do use for street and every day, Fujifilm XT2 with a 23mm (35mm FF) f2 lens. I love 35mm equivalent. For any studio portrait work, I use a Fujifilm GFX 50R with a 63mm (50mm FF) f2.8. That’s it, that’s all the gear I need and use, and I only use prime lenses.

    • @sharonleibel
      @sharonleibel 5 лет назад

      I started from buying a few lenses in order to “have it when I’ll need”. With time, I sold them and now I love the M10 35-50 and that’s it. Mostly with the 35.

    • @Poverello2001
      @Poverello2001 5 лет назад

      My favorite camera/lens combo is my Fuji X70 with its fixed 27mm (equivalent) lens. It also does a decent job at in-camera cropping, so with this simple setup I can choose from a 27, 35 or 50 mm f/2.8 lens. It’s also very small and pocketable and includes some great film simulations. It is my go to camera.

  • @ashleyburroughs4996
    @ashleyburroughs4996 5 лет назад

    A straight forward, down to earth advice. Thanks a lot for this video.

  • @ropersix
    @ropersix 5 лет назад

    I used to make small books of my projects, but have gotten lazy and haven't in awhile. I need to get un-lazy and start doing it again. And the Magcloud digest you mentioned in another video sounds perfect. Sometimes we need to hear what we already know.