Photography = digital. We just need to wake up and get with the program...sorry, I've just been out all day at the Thames Festival and it seems that one in five people there was wielding a huge DSLR with a REALLY big lens on the front. Several people had two. I swear I didn't see a single DSLR without a big lens. Don't those things come with primes? Maybe that's how it works. I know it's irrational and that I'm just being a git, but, damn, the whole thing wound me up. Late in the PM I saw one person with a trusty Pentax K1000 and almost hugged him. All I had was my phone which is so old it's stopped focusing, so I gave up taking photos altogether. Was on child-minding duties 90% of the time anyway.
(and rest........"Ommmmm")
Erm, so this program...I'll give it a go. Cheers for the heads-up, Carl.
Hi Ed.
Well, I must admit to being a devotee of both film and digital. I can see merit in both, especially if I'm pressed for time.
I know what you mean about big lenses but hope you take some comfort from the fact that the kit for my D700 comprises 24mm/f2.8, 35mm/f2, 50mm/f1.4 and 85mm/f1.8 (all Nikkor). I have a Tamron 90mm/f2.8 macro (which - like the other primes - fits nicely on the front of my F5).
The only zooms I have are a Nikkor 70-300mm/f4.5 VR and Nikkor 24-120mm non-VR. I do have a Nikkor 17-55mm/f2.8 - but that's for my D300 which is now used, almost exclusively, by my wife.
It drives me nuts when I see kids with high-end DSLRs (+/- long lenses) as I doubt they're learning anything. All power to them if they get good pictures but I'm convinced there's a widening skills gap as a result of reliance on auto-everything "scene" and Programme modes.
Funnily enough, when my wife and I were walking round Shoeburyness a couple of weekends ago, an older gentleman walked up to me, pointed at my Hasselblad and said something like, "I recognise this camera. You have a very fine piece of kit there". My wife nearly fainted as she is from an era which knew little of film and will only join in my photo days out of she can "chimp" over the images she takes, as she takes them...
(For those unfamiliar, "chimping" is the "oooh, oooh, oooh, aaah, aaah, aaah" noises made by digital devotees in self-congratulation having taken a half-decent photo.)
Paul.