The most important thing for me is how the strap attaches to the body. This has a huge effect on the resulting picture and can make or break a shot for me.
OK, OK.
Before I begin my self-"mute"ilation on the subject, I have to stand up for the gearheads.
Yep, it's not the camera, it's the photographer. But, the masters used to spend years studying paint. The paint doesn't define the painting, but it affects the outcome. I like to think glass (or lack thereof, Becky
) is to photography like paint is to painting. It may not be the interesting bit, or by far the most important bit, but I think there's equal opportunity to cajole certain feelings out of a scene by glass selection as there is by film selection or print technique. And it's the aspect that messes with my head the most, so I like it.
And, for those of us who do get cranky about the strap while we're trying to eat breakfast on the morning photo walk, I have a love-hate relationship with OP/TECH. Ugly, comfortable, too pricey if you do it the way they expect you to.
Instead I use a set of these on each camera for $7:
http://optechusa.com/utility-loop.htmlI own a
single set of these for my comfy strap for $10:
http://optechusa.com/system-connectors/swivel-hook.htmlDone. No more floppy Fastex connector dongles everywhere, cluttering up the shelf or taking up space in the bag. When I go for a hike, I hook my comfy strap on the camera bag instead of the camera. A $7 tax on each new camera. One strap to rule them all. And when my kidlet wants me to go old school, I hook a hippie strap into the utility loop, no more metal-on-metal action.
More coffee, more pictures, more love.