mysteryscribe said:
Your point if i understand it is, and correct me if im wrong, that you are limited in the kinds, not the quality ,of shots you make. if you dont have a room full of equipment.
Basically, but that "room full of equipment" is such a loaded phrase, as if I'm promoting that people should buy it all. I'm not. I think you've acknowledged the basic idea though. I was just hoping for a larger discussion on that. Instead it seemed that people were trying to convince me that people can shoot well with any camera, which I already believe.
The fact that someone doesn't own a specialty lens only means they can't make the shot the same way someone who does own one makes it. It won't look the same but without the choice who even thinks about that.
I do. I think we look at photography different enough that it makes it difficult to converse about this stuff. And I'm not just talking about specialty lenses. That's what is getting so frustrating. They make good examples, but the same thing applies to basic equipment.
I got your point. I reiterated your point. I asked if you thought that I didn't understand your point because of my point.
I know this shouldn't be about posting style, but I felt I like I was on topic about style and image choices, as I feel it's directly related to our choices in equipment. I was hoping to talk about that aspect, but I'll let it drop. I've said my piece and I'm not sure how else I can put it.
Maybe this: You don't roadrace with a Hummer, and you don't offroad with a Miata. Sure, a really good driver in a Hummer could beat a lousy driver in a Miata when on a road track, but if the point is to do the best you personally can, wouldn't you rather be in the vehicle made for the job? I like autocross. I have a Neon prepped for autocross. I don't need a huge engine, and I certainly don't want a Hummer. I don't have an interest in offroading. I could certainly autocross in a Hummer, but why spend that kind of crazy $$$ on a vehicle that isn't going to do what I want? I don't need a garage full of vehicles to make me happy. It would be fun, sure, but I don't need it. My choices are limited, but I've found my niche. The car is also fine and fun for street driving, which is good since that's what I do most, and it would be ok for mild road racing. I can even take it to the drag strip and it would do better than a stock Neon. I'm not eliminated from doing those things, but the car isn't optimum for them. But then with my normal tires, I can't drive it in the snow. That choice just isn't there. To do that, I need other equipment: my snow tires.
I know that can feed a beginners misconception that they need a lot of expensive equipment to take great pictures, but I'm saying the opposite. Once you know what your equipment can do and the choices involved, you can eliminate what you don't need. If you want to be able to take every kind of image out there, then yeah, you'll have to be making some decisions on where to spend your money.
A beginner hasn't had the chance to experience the different kinds of photography there is out there, so they won't know what they want. The temptation is to get everything so that they
won't be limited. There is some truth to that, as they can be limited. I guess that's what it boils down to. They are right. They will be limited. I don't think their mistakes comes from believing that, but that believing that it's a bad thing. Rather than telling them that they won't be limited, which I think they will have a hard time believing, tell them that limitations feed creativity and it's easier to learn what things do when you don't have so many damn choices to fiddle with. It's better to learn to drive in the family sedan than any specialized race vehicle or even an all-around hopped-up speed demon. It may not be sexy, but it's what works.