- Messages
- 5,607
- Name
- Stephen
- Edit My Images
- Yes
On "quality" as appled to cameras.... Or indeed anything. You can use a phrase "poor quality" to refer to workmanship; you can poetically say "the quality of mercy is not strained"; you can refer to "a lady of quality" (well, if you're a 19th century novel writer). Probably a few different meanings of the word in play there.
In my own mind, with cameras as mechanical devices I think of the smooth and refined quality of the wind on lever of the Nikon F3 compared to any other 35mm camera I've used, or the ease of firing the shutter on my Olympus XA. In these instances, for "quality" substitute "attribute" and the denotation is unchanged, but with a subtle shift in connotation.
Augustine said of the concept of time that he knew what it is - until asked to define it. Some words and ideas are like that; a gut feeling rather than a scientific definition which is far harder to enunciate.
In my own mind, with cameras as mechanical devices I think of the smooth and refined quality of the wind on lever of the Nikon F3 compared to any other 35mm camera I've used, or the ease of firing the shutter on my Olympus XA. In these instances, for "quality" substitute "attribute" and the denotation is unchanged, but with a subtle shift in connotation.
Augustine said of the concept of time that he knew what it is - until asked to define it. Some words and ideas are like that; a gut feeling rather than a scientific definition which is far harder to enunciate.



