mysteryscribe said:
Well you are limited by the equipment in your bag to some extent I agree. But you should be able to take whatever you have and make it work unless you dont have a camera at all.
You've been making this point and I've been agreeing with you. Do you think what I'm saying contradicts this?
So the limitations arent as much as the novice would think. I just dont like giving new photographers the idea that the more crap they buy, the more imagination they will have, Especially when the inverse is actually true.
I agree; above I suggested that beginners start with a more basic camera instead of sinking money into an expensive DSLR; but I also feel that overstating this also does them a disservice. What do you say to someone that takes a disposable camera with a 35mm/always-f22 lens to a ball game and gets frustrated with the images they get? Keep trying? They are likely to just give up photography before they learn anything useful.
I think it pays to know your equipment, know what it does, know how that affects the image. Once you understand this, the urge to keep upgrading goes away, because you know just what you need to create the images you want. I know that I need a wide aperture prime, but I don't need to spend money on an expensive telephoto zoom or flash unit. I feel no need to upgrade my 10D despite all the new cameras coming out. My camera bag has shrunk from a backpack down to a small shoulderbag that will hold the body, a couple of lenses, and the battery charger and other small bits.
I also mentioned that how you approach photography has a big impact on how you look at equipment. When many of us go out to take pictures, we will look for image that grab our attention and then set up the shot for what would turn what we see into a good photograph. We might see some nice trees by a pond in the distance, so we zoom out to wide angle, pick a narrow aperture, and shoot a nice landscape. We might then spot a boat at the edge of the pond, so we walk a little close, zoom in a bit, and open the aperture some to separate it a little from the water.
A few years ago I took a class called "Snapshot to Series" in which the instructor showed us how to approach photography a little differently. He had us all pick a theme; it could be as simple as "Windows" or more interpretive, like "Urban Blight". The end goal was to end up with a coherent series of images on this theme. He suggested making the same choices from photo to photo to help cement this coherence. Use the same focal length, similar apertures, the same processing, etc. The idea wasn't to go out looking for cool images to take, but to have a specific idea of the kind of images you wanted to make, and then go out and "find" (create, really), those images. If your theme is roadside stands, and you are shooting them at 35mm, don't bother with that great shot you see that would need a 100mm. Snap if you really want to for your collection, but your mind shouldn't even be there.
I'm not saying that it's a better way to work, but I found it really instructive. I prefer to work this way where I am with my photography. I put the 85mm lens on, and my eye starts seeing the world the way the camera will see it with that lens at 2.0, b&w, and high contrast, before even raising the camera to my eye. I'm not looking for good shot that I *can* take, I'm looking to make specific shots, and I'm going to put myself in the position I need to be able to create them.
If I were given a disposable camera, I could still find pictures to take that would turn out nice, but they wouldn't be the kind *I* want to take. I would know what to look for, so I wouldn't bother with portraits or the like. I'd concentrate on landscapes, urban scenes, and other shots that work well with a wide angle, but the style choices would be forced by the camera; they wouldn't be mine. I could still compose, but that's only one part of creating an image. There's not much of an issue there for people who shoot wide, so it's not inherent in the camera. There's nothing wrong with the camera. I just don't want to shoot that way.
It probably still sounds like I'm promoting expensive equipment to some people, but that's not the case. I personally think limited choices help the starting photographer. I often chime in suggesting that people don't need to upgrade, or that they might want to start with a simple camera, or suggesting a 50mm for a lens. I think it's best to know how to work what you have before you can understand what you gain (or lose) with other equipment. You can't upgrade your creativity or imagination.