Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/09/29
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]> As long as you can get what you want from _somewhere_, reliably and at > a decent price, and within a reasonable time, what advantage is there > to having a local photo shop, anyway? The local photo shop used to be a place where an inexperienced photographer could talk with people who knew a good deal about the subject and thus learn how to solve problems. That's long gone, for the most part. But a good local photo shop remains a place where you can go on a Saturday afternoon to pick up some obscure item or another for a project that you're in the middle of ... you'd otherwise have to stop what you're doing and wait for an item to be shipped to you. Such shops often have piles of useful widgets and miscellaneous accessories, etc, for older cameras. Twenty years from now, a new M6 TTL or F5 will likely still be a perfectly excellent camera, but as an older model you'll want to know a good shop that still has some NOS bits for them. Additionally, a good photo shop is somewhere you can build a relationship with a salesperson who sees a lot of new and used photo equipment going across the counter and who can advise you of the availability and value of stuff you might desire or need. As handy as the 'net is for this, there's nothing like having a knowledgeable person in the business who can give you a hand at certain times. I grew up poking around in camera shops, watchmakers, and places like that. I'm saddened to see them rapidly disappearing into the maw of modern "business & profit first!" chain stores, staffed at minimum expense with people who have no simpatico with the products they are selling. Godfrey