I have a confession to make - I don’t really like cameras.
I was talking about this with a friend the other day. I think there are two kinds of photographers - people who are really interested in cameras in and of themselves, and people who are really interested in images. I shoot with Canons most of the time, but one light tight box is as good as the next. It seems weird to have an allegiance to one brand or to have strong feelings about them. Not that I don’t love using them, because I obviously do. I like looking through the viewfinder and finding that composition that works, and I have to admit that the sound a Hasselblad makes when you press the shutter is pretty exciting. I’ve heard many people say that photographers are just people without the dedication to become painters, and I think there is a lot of truth in that. For me cameras are just a means to an end. To be interested in cameras would be like a carpenter who cared about hammers more than building houses.
When I first read the blog of Chase Jarvis I thought his “the best camera is the one you have with you” mantra summed up pretty perfectly how I felt about cameras. And I have to agree with him that one of the most exciting photo technology things to come in the last few years isn’t that the 5Dmk2 has a self-cleaning sensor or that Leica finally made a digital rangefinder - but the iPhone. Finally there is a camera that is always with me, however imperfect it may be technically. Chase’s new “Best Camera” iPhone app has been talked about endlessly elsewhere on the internet so I’m not going to go on about that, other than to say that I’ve had a lot of fun playing with it lately (I took the above image with it on the way to job the other day). I like having something in my pocket that allows me at all times to work out a composition or capture something interesting.
