Today I went into the big city. There was a sidewalk sale on the same street where my favorite camera store (read most accessible) is located.
What a disappointment!
If I was all excited yesterday with the prospect of going there to get a good deal and bringing back a few essentials, right now I feel burned sad and p***** off.
Usually, they have some tables outside selling frames, albums, and some odd accessories that are stuck in inventory. They also usually order some low priced bags and tripods to attract customers. They also usually have a wheel of fortune that gives away small trinkets (last year I got a nice lab apron). But not this year.
This year, it was two employees under a tent offering stickers and balloons... period.
Inside, they were offering an 8% discount on everything in store to celebrate their 88th anniversary... when you consider we have 15% tax here, it's not much of a deal.
Gear wise, I was looking for a small tripod for my ondu pinhole... I couldn't find anything cheaper than 120$.
I was looking for a yellow filter for my Fed... all I could find was some 80$ UV filters from B+W...
I looked at their usually fairly substantial but small Lomography counter... everything was at prices higher than at the Lomo website.
I looked at some of their film prices... and just looking felt like swallowing a horse chestnut with the spiky green cover still attached.
I looked at some of the lenses in display cases... who in the world needs a 14,000$ 800mm prime lens? I sure don't... my car isn't even worth that amount of money!
In the end, I got 4 rolls of HP5 (which they had mixed-up with some Delta400 in the same pile) at 6.99$ each and a bottle of PQ Universal for 10.99$...
That's friggin expensive in my book.
And now I'm back home... tired... sad and mad feeling like I've been had all the way...
They say "support your local merchants", but sheesh!
And that's not to mention the number of empty roadwork construction sites, endless rows of orange cones and wedding cakes (that's what we call the big round towers), countless potholes, insane traffic, dilapidated buildings (since I studied the building code, I'm more sensitive to this stuff), empty commercial spaces...