I've been spending far too much time online recently - well, for months, actually - considering a not inconsiderable investment in a lens (which would no doubt require a body I don't own) to give me some bokeh. Not for street work per se, but for blurred backgrounds when I take portraits outside, either in the smarter streets (probably 'roads') of London, or in even smarter countryside. We should all a one-point-something lens right? Well, perhaps not.
I was looking through my photofiles the other day for an image of a particular model. I couldn't remember her name (I blame my age) but I knew that I'd used the 500c/m, so I opened every file marked BLAD until I found her. And there she was. Standing in a field, with lovely bokeh by the bucket load. When I realised this, I started to look at the photo set and they were all taken, not with the portrait 150mm f4, but with the standard 80mm f2.8. Snap after snap of background loveliness, from a heavily rallied lens worth £250-300.
My long winded point. Before I decide to 'invest' in another piece of kit, I'm going to go through my existing gear and decide how I can create what I need from what I've got.
And the savings? Well, that will be spent on wasting more film. I'm going to use the Blad extensively this year & have even decided to take the 500 & 80mm as my 'carry' camera on this year's long haul holiday. I might come back with one arm considerably more developed than the other, but my backgrounds will be, as young persons used to say, about 40 years ago, 'outta sight'.