Let's get equipment out of the way right up front, because it does influence the way I see. First, philosophy: In general, I agree with the old cliche that a good photographer can get good images with most anything. That said, quality equipment brings certain big advantages.
Reliability, for one. I don't bang cameras around the way I did in the photojournalism days, however they are still tools. I don't want to worry about a minor impact or a few minutes in the rain putting gear out of commission. Pro-level gear holds up to pro level abuse, so it can handle my current serious amateur level abuse with ease. Not worrying about that frees my mind for other things. Reliable, well built gear costs more to design and construct. It's less likely to need repair later.
Then there are lenses. It's possible to soften sharp images, it's not possible to sharpen soft images (much). Sharp lenses, especially wide open or at the edges, are expensive. That's simple reality.
Finally, there are ways of seeing influenced by the gear. View cameras are great for landscapes from a tripod. Medium format is awesome in the studio, or whenever one is not in too much of a hurry and quality matters more than speed and spontaneity. SLR's and the newest EVF digital cameras are great for long lenses, macro work, and one type of working quickly. Right now I'm not needing most of that.
Since about 1998 I've been shooting primarily Leica rangefinder. The little rangefinders are perfect for my photojournalism-influenced documentary way of working. They're compact, easy to carry, discrete, and fast for getting one or two shots. They're good at low light photography. I use three of them.
The first is a M6TTL purchased new in 1998 or 99. I traded some other gear to soften the bite of that one, and I still have it today after thousands of images on film. It's been in once for a CLA, and has been utterly reliable. because it has a built in meter, I tend to use it for less leisurely film work. It generally mounts a 50mm Summilux purchased used for not very much by modern standards, a little worn around the edges but wonderful at wide-open rendering.
The M4 was purchased used a few years later as a backup. It sees less use, mostly when I'm wandering on a quiet weekend and not in a hurry, or in a back to basics mood when using a hand-held meter feels right. In some ways I prefer the M4 body, it's slightly smaller (in height), balances a bit better, has the intangible smoothness of the the old brass cameras. Sometimes it wears one of the 50 mm lenses, sometimes a silver 35mm Summicron that I bought on consignment 20 years ago for a steal.
Until recently, the digital component of the triad was an M8. It generated wonderful images which I sometimes printed to 13x19 inches. By Leica standards it was loud, the deeper/fatter digital body made it bulkier, and the 1.3x crop factor drove me crazy. Still, I used it for well over a decade after buying it as a deeply marked down demo and it had something over 15,000 actuations.
Those three cameras were used for most of the images on earlier posts.
Ever since the M10 was released in 2017 the plan has been to trade up. I skipped over the intermediate "typ" models because they had, in my opinion, lost some of the minimalism. The typ 240 especially was never an option (video? In a Leica? seriously?). When the M10 solved the size issue and came in at the same size as an M6 TTL and with none of the extras and with simplified menus and layout, I knew it was almost time. There are lots of other subtle and not so subtle advances, there are plenty of good review out there to read about those (I especially recommend https://www.reddotforum.com/content/2017/02/leica-m10-review-the-quintessential-digital-m/ ).
A few weeks ago while in San Francisco, visiting the office I never physically work from, I traded the M8 in for an M10. The trade in value was higher than expected, making it an easy decision. That's the almost new M10 in the photo at the top; technically used and thus deeply discounted, but essentially unmarked and in the original box. Someone bought it and never really used it. The M10 has facilitated lots of recent random shooting, getting back in practice, photographing meaningless things just to see what it would do. That's been valuable, a way to get back in practice, to sharpen up ability to see and react. Mostly I've used an old Canadian-made 50mm Summicron, a little beat up and acquired as a bargain a long time ago, and wonderfully sharp with the 24MP sensor. F2.0 is plenty for a high-ISO capable M10, so that lens is likely to live on the camera most of the time. I can go months without changing lenses.
Today I went back to the M6 and film for the first time in a couple weeks, now that the initial novelty is past.
So that's where we're starting the journey. I'm considering selling a few of the old Nikons and other things still lurking in drawers, because I never use them anymore and don't really need them and they deserve to be used. I could get by 99% of the time with just my Leicas.
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