It's a camera. It's a tool. It's a lump of metal and glass. It's a means to an end. It takes pictures. It doesn't excite you? It's not designed for that. It's designed to do a job and if you think that the gear is more important than the product then you are looking at the whole process from the wrong end and you will never be happy.
Whilst it is a tool I think it's fair to say some cameras are more fun/nicer to use than others and if you don't gel with your 'tool' you're going to find you use it less and less. I sometimes enjoy the process of taking a photo more than the end result and in this case you could argue that having the right tool is more important than the final result.It's a camera. It's a tool. It's a lump of metal and glass. It's a means to an end. It takes pictures. It doesn't excite you? It's not designed for that. It's designed to do a job and if you think that the gear is more important than the product then you are looking at the whole process from the wrong end and you will never be happy.
Granted that some cameras are different in use than others but that is really nothing more than ergonomics.
Stop thinking that it is the gear that gets you good pictures. It isn't. You get the good pictures; the camera merely helps you.
Agreed, but as I said that's really down to ergonomics. There are very few cameras these days that take bad pictures. Some folk just won'ttake the time to get to know their gear and think that ££££ is a solution to all their woes.Whilst it is a tool I think it's fair to say some cameras are more fun/nicer to use than others and if you don't gel with your 'tool' you're going to find you use it less and less
I think there's more to it than ergonomics TBH, viewfinder, snappiness of AF acquisition, reliability of AF acquisition, functions, function layout (you may mean this when you say ergonomics), and a few more things all add/detract from the enjoyment of using a camera IMO. YMMVAgreed, but as I said that's really down to ergonomics. There are very few cameras these days that take bad pictures. Some folk just won'ttake the time to get to know their gear and think that ££££ is a solution to all their woes.
And of course none of this matters if it doesn't look good![]()
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What you saying about my Flickr stream is it that bad!!!!The suggestion earlier about shooting some film isn't a bad one. Looking at your Flickr stream, I don't see anything that you couldn't get from film (technically) and I'm not sure why you need to keep your shutter speed up/continuous? The point about shooting film is that it's 'different' from your digital kit. As per the post above about a camera being a tool, to a large extent that's true but I agree that ergonomics is massively important because if you don't like using your camera, the actual ability of it doesn't matter.
I saw your post on the Leica thread about the TL. Apart from the red dot and touchscreen, I struggle to see what that offers over an A6000/6300/6500 apart from an empty bank account.
For less than £50 you can try out any one of many 35mm film cameras and for not a lot more you could pick up some medium format kit that will give you a shooting experience completely different to any digital kit. Try a TLR and shoot through a waist level finder to see if the different approach/style helps to kickstart your mojo again.
I shoot digital because it delivers results when I need it to but I shoot Film because it's a mix of frustration, achievement and fun.
Put it into cars, if you want to get from London to Cardiff you can do in a Daewoo Matiz but you may want to buy a M3 or a Bentley or whatever else you like that's big and fast. Now you can tell me all you want that propel in the Matiz are happy that's fine but maybe the people in the m3 are happier.
Now I don't drive so I have no interest in cars but that aside I want something that I connect with and like the feel. Why can't I want a camera go be the best I can afford? Hell if we all just said it doesn't matter what we have we would all have a D40 and be happy and our iphones but we don't we want something that we like this feel of and renders the photos. Of course you can still be s*** at photography as a bad driver in a decent car but you get my drift... Oh yeah car puns
Well I said the Nikon sat there gathering dust and I wanted something more fun so I bought the Fuji. Obviously the mojo is down to me, the camera was to help me want to take photos again.Yeah, but that still requires you want to go to Cardiff in the first place.
I wonder if my analogies are to obtuse but basically you have owned two of the best cameras money can buy and you are not happy. The question is: is it the gear that doesn't have the mojo or is it you?
It's ok Steve, I appreciate I'm no David Bailey.I didn't say it was bad, I meant the style isn't something you can only deliver with digital. Shallow depth of field in portraits is a walk in the park for medium format film :0)
Most film kit will shoot up to 1/500th and later 35mm will match modern digital so that's not a major issue.
Hi guys,
I'm at a quandary with my photography of where I want to go and how I'm going to be producing that.
I started off many moons ago with a canon 400 and then onto the Nikon d5000, moved on to the heaviest of huge and heavy D700 and then on to the d750 and now onto the Fuji.
I fell out of the excitement of photography with the Nikon's and canons and sold my d750 and bought a Fuji XT2 of which I'm finding although some images are lovely it's no where near as good as the D750 in terms of AF and reliability. I do suffer a little from shaky hands nothing major but certainly means I can't shoot lower than 80 hand held. So I'm thinking if selling the Fuji gear now XT2, 56mm lens and 18mm lens and moving on to something else but the question is what.
Wanted to share my ramblings
Been there done thatits like a women, never go back over old ground. You'll only end up disappointed


Hi Steve thanks for understanding my frustrations.Aren't they just more of the same (but smaller sensor and body)? I understand the OPs frustration, I often lose my creative interest when only shooting digital because it can get a bit stale. It sounds like buying more digital gear isn't really going to do anything more than appease a bit of short term GAS but won't necessarily kickstart anything long term.
There's always a personal project? Shooting the same subject regularly can lose its' interest (even when it's our own kids we're taking pictures of!). Try something different like macro/landscapes/astro/sports. It doesn't need to deliver the best results but if it makes you actually want to take the camera out it's done the job.
M3 for me all day longPut it into cars, if you want to get from London to Cardiff you can do in a Daewoo Matiz but you may want to buy a M3 or a Bentley or whatever else you like that's big and fast. Now you can tell me all you want that propel in the Matiz are happy that's fine but maybe the people in the m3 are happier.
Now I don't drive so I have no interest in cars but that aside I want something that I connect with and like the feel. Why can't I want a camera go be the best I can afford? Hell if we all just said it doesn't matter what we have we would all have a D40 and be happy and our iphones but we don't we want something that we like this feel of and renders the photos. Of course you can still be s*** at photography as a bad driver in a decent car but you get my drift... Oh yeah car puns
You need the red dot for warp factor 9Wouldn't mind an M3 despite the red dot...

How about going on a photography course ,some sort of creative one or one that includes a trip abroad
Well I said the Nikon sat there gathering dust and I wanted something more fun so I bought the Fuji. Obviously the mojo is down to me, the camera was to help me want to take photos again.
Pentax K1, full frame, good lenses and not too pricy.
Have to second this option, it's my main setup!
There's also a D500 and 400 f2.8 for wildlife work, maybe more than one system is the way to go, right tool for the right job?
Haha no my flickr followers are irrelevant.@Nuzik do you feel pressure to produce new material because you have so many followers on flickr?
Sooner you let go of chasing the cleanest sharpest images possible the happier you'll be.
Buy more books not gear.
I know I'm not really worried what they think it was just a laugh adding them.Wow, you're following a lot of people!
8.6k Followers•29.5k Following
A friend of mine used to follow a huge number of people. He always gets a lot of comments because there are so many people but realistically, very few were ever really constructive as they were simply doing the same to build their followers up.
Yip it's a combination that's cost me a bloody fortune over the years!GAS and Pixel peeping its a terrible combination
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Danny, I'd be interested in your thoughts on the K1, been having a look at full frame options and its quite tempting.