Skip to main content

So, a Crush for your Old Cameras still?

F1640012 (Large) (Medium)^These birds were as big as half an adult's height.  Well, it depends on how high you are.  All images in this post are film photos. 
 
Maybe I shall be as wise as Marco who, in his comment yesterday, revealed that his GX200 would be sold. I am still keeping two GX200, and even my decade-old Minolta Dynax 7 and, believe or not, the dead body (well, it doesn't function anymore) of my Minolta Dynax 7000i plus a P&S Oly film mju-zoom camera.
  
F1640010 (Large) (Medium)
 
Can you recall the crush for such old flames when you first caught sight of them seemingly with a halo overhead inside the shop windows?

And if you have many old cameras, it was "lust" not just "crush".
 

F1640003 (Large) (Medium)^I like the serene view of this boardwalk over a pond.

Want a cure to mitigate your insatisfiable photographic libido which get you in a downward spiral of dire need of money?

It is time to revive your old flames. Give them a hug (not with force or the battery compartment flip may fall out) and give them a clean-up as in the first days when you both met. Then, bring them (one at a time) out for a date.
 
F1640017 (Large) (Medium) 
So I brought mine, the Dynax 7  to the Mai Po Marshes which is a nature reserve under the World Wild Fund for Nature (Didn't I say that Hong Kong is not just a city for business?). The reserve restricts access by the general public except for participants of the guided tour at a cost.

F1640018 (Large) (Medium)^The fast focusing of the camera allowed me to snap this tiny bird perched briefly on the fallen bough and flew away in the next second. 
 
Although the tour is primary for bird watching, for which the staff can lend you monocular and binoculars of high-magnification power, it is worthy of a photographic trip or even just chilling-out from the crazy rat-racing world.
 

F1640007 (Large) (Medium)

F1640009 (Large) (Medium)
 
I certainly made sure that it was worthy of all three of the purposes.

The Minolta Dynax 7 with the lenses and the flashgun slowed me down  bit after some time walking around and climbing up and down for photos, which is the downside of heavy, regular photographic gear. The saving grace was that I once again enjoyed the joy of the past when I first used it. Suddenly, I was like being stripped of the desire for any new cameras.

F1640014 (Large) (Medium)
Actually, I felt myself a class above using a film SLR while the others kept checking out the LCD screens of their DSLRs as if they weren't sure about any of the shots. No wonder I could stay more focused on composing and doing every shots.
 
F1640013 (Large) (Medium)
Things became simpler. A good scene, compose, expose and shot. What a refined joy of photography without keeping thinking about the camera per se!

F1640021 (Large) (Medium)

Comments

Rob Leslie said…
I still have many of my favourite cameras. They hold fond memories.
To list just a few.
Ricoh 500G bought in 1979. Pentax ME Super, Nikon EM, Olympus XA, Fuji HDM.
All those have been well used over the years. Despite shooting with many much high grade models they were favorites.
I loved the simple light weight Nikon EM even though I had a F2, F3 and F100. For some reson I prefered the Penatx ME to the MX and later LX.
My oldest camera which I love the most is my Pentax SL bought new in 1968. It must have taken at least 100.000+ exposures but it still works and I still use the f1.8 55mm lens on my digital Pentax DSLRs. I even take the old SL out and take a few shots but I don't bother to put a film in it these days!
Nevin said…
An admirable collection!

Mechanical devices stand the test of time better than the electronic ones. I'd say that 40 years from now not many of today's digital cameras will function as well as your old mechanical gems.

My uncle had spent a fortune (he's young with no money then)in the Nikon F2 system. Unfortunately, the body, lenses and flashgun and all the related paraphernalia have been stored too long too improperly that they go a bit mouldy now.

Popular posts from this blog

New Low Prices

The window shopping some hours ago has almost provoked my AgIDS illness.  Just in case you’re in Hong Kong or are coming here, and have the money to burn (All in HK$/ body only): GX200 = $3,280 GRD2 = $3,380 LX3 = $3,180 G10 = $3,280 Prices are available form a gear shop on the 1st floor of the Mongkok Computer Centre.   Besides these new low prices, I found that Wing Shing Photo (55-57Sai Yeung Choi St., MK Tel: 2396 6886/ 91-95 Fa Yuen St., MK  Tel: 2396 6885) is offering a Sony A700 + Carl Zeiss Lens package for HK$9,980 (hopefully, a bargain will make it some hundreds cheaper).

Final Verdicts: GF2 in Action

(The rest of the GF2 review posts can be found here ) It is widely believed that the GF2 is a paradoxical downward-upgrade version of the GF1. So, after all the discussions of its bells and whistles, how does it perform in reality? First things first. Which or what kind of cameras should we measure the GF2 against for that matter? We believe that potential buyers of the GF2, maybe except for serial fad chasers and the diehard loyalists, are attracted by its smallness in size with a larger sensor to achieve better image quality, especially at ISO 800 or above. However, given the less satisfactory handling with for example just one dial, the GF2 cannot assume the place of a primary camera. Put together, these assumptions suggest that the GF2 is more suited to be used as a backup camera for social and street shots. Let's grill the GF2 on this basis. In the Hand An obvious merit of the GF2 is size. It feels much less bulky in the hand than the GF1 or the NX100, and just lik...

Dressing Up

(Camera: Ricoh GX200) On the street, a group of Chinese tourists are waiting for probably pick-up. With oblivion to the surrounding, this man changes his vest for an unknown reason to the author taking the opportunity to do a snap shot of the scene of an indecent taste.  The increasingly common sights, or eyesores considered by some, of people squatting in front of shops or in the thoroughfares, together with more billboards written in simplified Chinese, seem to push this international city towards the Chinese characteristics of the Mainland cities. The other day when the author visited the the aquarium and panda's home in the Ocean Park, there were, among the swamps of tourists, conspicuous signs saying, "Keep Quiet" and "Don't Use Flash".  The management of the Park has obviously deployed a much bigger troop of attendants to carry the signs around. On one occasion, one of those attendants was so annoyed that she went up to a tourist and made a big long...