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TwoWheeler

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Been lurking here for a bit and it seemed like a decent place - no flame wars. A bit quiet, but decent.

Started with film, late ‘70’s (Yashica FX-3). Got sick of paying good money for crappy photos and lost interest.

The need for a camera - even just to take snapshots - eventually reared its ugly head. By this time, digital was a thing. I started playing with an Olympus Camedia 720 and had a lot of fun. It was refreshing to be able to take photos and get instant disappointment -er- gratification and I felt free to take shots that I wasn’t sure if they were going to work or not. If they didn’t, well there was always the trashcan icon.

Since I was taking photos again, I pretty quickly ran up against the limitations of a P&S - it took forever for the shutter to fire, and then an eternity while it chewed on your image, before you could take another one. “Point and shoot”? More like “point and wait”. Still, it was a gateway drug.

I started exploring my options and ended up with a Sony (“Sony makes cameras now?”) A200. I had a lot of fun with that, and started to get the rudiments of editing when I bought Aperture. I shot with that for a couple of years, but again, ran into the limitations of the camera - slow autofocus, for one. The Sony kind of went by the wayside.

In the meantime, I started taking pictures with my phone. This revived my interest in “real” photography.

I trialed a Nikon …Z-50…I think… under their “Yellow” promo. (You bought and paid for a camera and a one or two lens kit and you had 30 days to try it. If you weren’t happy with it, they’d take it back). I didn’t understand the menus or the controls, so it went back. (The problem was pretty much exclusively on the operator end….)

Still, I wanted a “real” camera. I started shopping around and found the Fujifilm XT-30. It was small and light (“Since I’m probably going to spend more time carrying this thing than I am shooting it…that’s a big plus!”) It also had actual, physical controls that I understood, like my old Yashica. I bought that and a couple of lenses.

I had a lot of fun with it and took quite a few decent images, but the things that I thought were pluses quickly became minuses. The small form factor got awkward, fast, when you hung a big lens off the front. I almost felt like I should have my pinky in the air while I was shooting with it. Also, the physical controls were - to me - a nuisance. I was forever knocking something out of whack when I pulled the camera out of the bag and if you shoot like I do - lots of different type of subjects - you can’t set everything to a Custom setting because some of the changes require a physical switch to be moved, as well.

I started shopping for a replacement. This time I got smart: I rented a bunch of cameras to try before slapping my credit card down. I trialed a Sony A7IV, the A7RV, a Fuji XH2, and a Nikon Z7. The Sony a7IV was the leading contender, but it wasn’t quite “it”. They all took good photos, but none of them seemed the perfect fit.

For whatever reason - even though I hadn’t tried one, my gut said “Canon R6 or R5…” I took the plunge and bought an R5. This time my impulse was correct…and here I am.
 
Hey TwoWheeler, welcome to the site.

I've only been here a short time myself, there is a pretty good bunch of folks here!

Look forward to shooting the breeze.
 
Welcome and thanks for joining up and saying hello TwoWheeler. It certainly sounds like you did your research before picking up the R5! If you have any questions about the forum here just let me know.
 
Welcome! Also, very amused at your "pinky in the air" commentary on the small Fuji.
 
Welcome! Also, very amused at your "pinky in the air" commentary on the small Fuji.
I sometimes referred to it as "dainty".

Good camera and I got some great images with it, but not a good fit for what I do. Lesson learned.
 
Greetings. I've had a similar path. I picked up (and still use) my Minolta SR-T201 back in 1976...the price of film and developing along with raising a family meant something needed to go on the back burner.

My research when to exploring "who had the most lenses" as, to me, the lenses were more important than the camera.

I ended up on getting a Canon EOS Rebel R5 with both the 18-55mm kit L and 70-300mm kit L lenses.


279080555_527583515562702_6226818775577305402_n-2.jpg
  • Join to view EXIF data.
 
Greetings. I've had a similar path. I picked up (and still use) my Minolta SR-T201 back in 1976...the price of film and developing along with raising a family meant something needed to go on the back burner.
I can remember my first roll of film out of the Yashica. I was so psyched…and then when the pictures came back, I was so disappointed. Everything was flat and lifeless and the focus seemed mushy…and it never seemed to get any better. I even tried slide film, reasoning that that left the mutants doing the printing out of the loop. It was a bit better, but then, showing up at a party with a slide projector was a surefire buzzkill…. (Almost as bad as showing up with a slide rule…. :p )
My research when to exploring "who had the most lenses" as, to me, the lenses were more important than the camera.

So you went Sony, then? ;)
I ended up on getting a Canon EOS Rebel R5 with both the 18-55mm kit L and 70-300mm kit L lenses.

Nice. Is that a prototype? Are you a Canon Ambassador?
 

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