Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1997/07/22
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]On 22 Jul 97, Jim Brick wrote: <snip> > The camera for you is the camera that your psyche feels best with. That > your subconscious can operate. And your creativity flows through. Don't > buy it because of its techno-wizardry or for its status. Neither one > makes images. That comes from you. Though I'm not disagreeing with you, Jim, my own case seems a bit different. If I take a strange anything (I know, you guys are thinking, woman, whereas I truly mean mainly devices such as cameras) and work with it in a concentrated way for a varying period of time, I can and do become accustomed to it and downright fond of it. My fingers and reflexes (here we go again) become trained in the way they must go and it soon becomes habit and comfortable. That said, I can and have become comfortable with whatever I have used. I'm not one of those that believes that "everyone has a talent, if we can just find it"! I haven't a talent (talent not liking) in my body and my photography shows it. It, however, pleases me and dutifully records what I want to record, particularly in the field of natural history. Lastly, like it or not, technology sells! Most buyers truly believe that because the photo credits show Canon and Nikon as super predominant, they will buy same. After all, they are just as creative as the notable photographers whose work they see. Wrong! - -- Roger Beamon Naturalist & Photographer Leica Historical Society Of America mailto:beamon@primenet.com Thought for the day: Dictatorship (n): a form of government under which everything which is not prohibited is compulsory.