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- Newsgroups: rec.photo
- Path: sparky!uunet!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!darwin.sura.net!ra!ra.nrl.navy.mil!tse
- From: tse@ra.nrl.navy.mil (Anthony Tse)
- Subject: A photographer's story
- Message-ID: <C0015M.ApB@ra.nrl.navy.mil>
- Sender: usenet@ra.nrl.navy.mil
- Organization: Naval Research Lab, Washington, DC
- Date: Tue, 29 Dec 1992 02:20:09 GMT
- Lines: 71
-
- I am going to catch a lot of flame for this, but I think some
- of you will like it, so here it goes.
-
- Seems to me most people who are interested enough in photography to
- scrap up what little money they have to buy a "real" camera when they
- were in high school or college started out dreaming about being a
- photojournalist. Travel around the world, shoot important events,
- have their pictures printed on the front page. Sometime around puberty,
- they dream about photographing beautiful women and have their pictures
- published in Sport Illustrated or something even more interesting. In
- rare occasion, some will dream about lugging 50lb of large format
- equipment and that damn wooden tripod wandering around in the middle of
- nowhere, waiting until the light is just right, the puff of cloud is
- at just the right place, and sell their pictures for $5000 a piece.
-
- In most cases, we read magazines like pop phot, find out what each
- and every camera can and cannot do, I mean, we know those spec so well,
- we can recite them on the spot. Then we make up our mind, spend the
- last penny from the last pay check (or last allowance) and spring for
- that super 35mm camera with all the features possible, and of course, the
- cheapest possible zoom we can find cause we just spent all our money
- on the camera body. Off we go, shooting friends, mom, dad, and the
- family dog. Few lucky ones get to shot football games and have their
- pictures published in the school paper. And a few more are still reading
- pop photo and learning about what all the new cameras will and will not
- do, thinking how are they going scrap up another $600 for that new
- camera body with even more features. I mean, you can have a bar code
- reader, RS232 interface, 5fps moterdrive, 2000 different metering mode,
- just got to have it. After a year or so, most photographers find
- out that cheap zoom is really not that good. For the sport
- photographers, the picture quaility is almost acceptable, but it's just
- too damn slow. For those who run around hiding behind trees to
- take pictures of pretty girls, the 8x10s they get back from the
- neighborhood drug store look horrible. For the Ansal Adams wannabes,
- they are a unhappy bunch, their prints just don't look good. But those
- who are still reading pop photo are happy as a clam, casue there is yet
- another generation of cameras with even more features. As we grow
- older, we find jobs, and pay checks. The high school photojournalist
- now work for a newspaper. He can finally dump that piece of junk zoom
- and borrow/buy good fast zoom and even a few fixed lens. The portrait
- shooter make enough money to buy that fast short tele. If the girl
- has a big boyfriend, he can alway rent that 300 2.8. A small number
- go as far as signing up for a nude photography class and get to
- post all the beautiful models. A few peepers are good enough and
- work for Sport Illustrated & Vanity Fair, some even move up to
- medium format freelancing. The Ansal Adams wannabes are still a
- unhappy bunch, seems like they can either buy a car or they
- can buy the Sinar P-3 and the cool light head, but they are smart,
- knowing damn well their wives will leave them if they go for the
- P-3/cool light, they went for the car, picture quaility be damn,
- something are more important in life (although I am sure some will
- disagree :)) Those who are still reading pop photo is on their third
- camera body, if they were smart enough to stick with Nikon, they will
- still have the piece of junk zoom, whereas the unlucky Canon owners have
- to spring for another zoom. By the time we are 55 years old, most
- of us will be travelling all over the world, taking pictures of
- interesting people and places, and bore our grandchildren to tear by
- making them watch 5 hour long slide shows. The photojournalists and
- glamor photographers will retire satisified with their life's work.
- The Ansal Adams wannabes finally got their 4x5 camera and even a Minolta
- 45A, some stick with b&w, other tinker with cibachrome, the few
- who've been drop head first from the upper bunk too many times print
- dye transfer for a living. Maybe they didn't sell any print for
- $5000 a piece, but they are happy. Those who have a life subscription
- to pop photo, well, they haven't touch anything more then a point and
- shoot in over 20 years.
-
- END OF STORY
-
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- #include <std_disclaimer.h>
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