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Photography

When I was a professional photographer the 2 sweetest cameras probably were,.....

 

probably for 35mm Leica mainly for the lenses, and Hasselblad for medium format. Masterfully built cameras and lenses, and the format was determined by how large you intended to enlarge the photographs.


So I chose Hasselblad and for 30 some years it was my only camera system, until I went digital in around 2010ish and switches to Canon. Basically Canon and Nikon are interchangeable with each leapfrogging over each other every couple of years. 

BUT. IT AINT ABOUT THE CAMERA.

So buying expensive cameras are like buying Rolex and Patek. They scratch an itch for flexing your wealth but they don't make you a better photographer unless you learn to be a pretty good photographer first.

I see people posting pictures and bragging about...see I took this and it's straight out of the camera, no post production....and I cringe. It's like owning a Ferrari and never shifting out of first gear.

It's digital it's SUPPOSED to be post processed, it NEEDS to be post processed. The sensor is picking up ALL THIS INFORMATION from the shot, and YOU need to decided which parts you want to use. Unless you shoot JPEGS and then it just becomes an expensive point and shoot and let it decide how your picture should look.

My advice for what you want to shoot. Buy a fairly moderate priced Canon, Nikon or maybe Sony and buy a zoom lens that takes it from say 28mm to 210mm and get yourself out there and shoot everything you can find to shoot. Download LIGHTROOM from Adobe for something like 10 dollars a month and learn how to store, delete and process your images, and do that for a year.

Then by that time you'll know if you need an expensive toy like Leica or if you want to move up the food chain to a bunch of different lenses and bodies.

Hope this helps.


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