!?i have to say the reason i bought the equiptment i bought was because i need it. I was going to my local football team with a 40D and a 100-400 and it was not good enough when it started getting dark, so i bought a 1D mkIII with outstanding noise capability and a 120-300mm f/2.8 for the low light. I would not have been able to take the shots i want without the equiptment..
Surely if a photograph has the ability to infuse an emotional response from the viewer, even if it is a negative one, its worth far out weights the merits of any post production used or the equipment it was taken with?
But maybe you feel the two have equal merit?
Or maybe even the technical excellence of the image is where the resonance of the image gets its strength from for you?
As you start as a photographer it is easy to believe in the magic bullet, in so far as 'If I had x lens I could take so much better photographs' and with the information now so readily accessible it is easier to sit around and read pages and pages of information about x lens than it is to actually get out and about and make photographs and develop your eye. 20 Years ago, you would have gone to camera club and read reviews in magazine instead lol. People don't understand that having the same lens and camera will not get you the same shot as the one you are trying to imitate. I think this realisation comes quite late on with a lot of people. So yes, I think a lot of enthusiast do get hung up with 'Function over Form'
I also think that the kind of peer review you get on forums does tend to be biased towards the 'nice shot but could be sharper' and 'nice shot but if you had a better lens you would get nicer out of focus areas' etc. It's not very often you see comments about the composition beyond the rule of thirds and lead in lines and this only serves to reinforce the idea that the camera truly matters. Obviously there are photos you wouldn't get with a Polaroid that you can get with a D3 but you wouldnt try and do plumbing with a wood saw!
Impact, emotion and viewer involvement is very genre specific. E.G. In motorsport. There, the technical element is much more important than a genre where the subject is the entire photograph and technical element is secondary, such as reportage and war photography. Nobody cares if the photographer is using a D3 or a Holga, what matters is capturing the emotional impact of the scene or having the balls to stick your head above the trench and get the shot.
There are always going to be people to whom photography is more about conspicous consumption than it is about art, but it's the same with so many things. How many owners of BMW M3's actually have them because they like to take them to track days and truly appreciate the abilities of the car and how many have them because it looks good on the driveway?



Karsch - isn't that a pressure washer...
Off to google...