Am I still taking photos in 2020? Kinda
TL;DR: yes, but also not as much as I used to, which turns out to not be a bad thing.
More than a year ago, I wrote about how I wanted to regain my love for photography. Which means itās about time for a quick review.
Now that I looked back at my last article, I canāt help but cringe the entire time, mostly because I canāt shut up about photography gear. I am still a nerd and enjoy all the great gears, but in the last 18 months, I have slowly realized how little attention I was paying to the rest of āphotographyā: composition, lighting, timing, location, emotion, all that jazz. And that is absolutely something I am still trying to grasp. And before diving into that, I am just gonna have a quick paragraph to list my gears and the reason why they are here to stay:
What hasĀ changed?
Back in secondary school (or so call high school), I fall in love with photography because it allows me to connect to all sorts of people: all the athletes during sports days, random student event organizers from other grades, even people from other schools.
Now that I am 10 years older, work in a 9ā5 job, and havenāt went out for anything other then shopping/business for the last 4 months, how I see photography has changed a lot. Itās a lot more about nostalgia of my student days, which probably explains why I am more into retro-looking gears; now itās also a lot less social, a lot less active. Instead of taking photos of athletes, now I take photos of pedestrians, and often even without any particular reason/subject/anything.
How am I dealing with thoseĀ changes?
Honestly, not well. I really missed back being able to make friends at school when I was young; I missed when my knee was not a shit show; I missed actually being slightly good at some sports. And thatās probably why for the last few years, I have kinda indulge myself in āwhatās the gear that would make it feel like taking pictures with my D40 when I was 16ā. Well, sadly the answer is ānoneā.
I donāt remember how it happens, but slowly I started to watch more videos about film photography, firstly I was still focusing on the camera, the film, or even how to process them. Whatās different this time is that a lot of those videos also pay a lot more attention on other aspects of photography, which slowly opens up my eyes to what Iāve been missing. Hopefully, I am slowing getting to a point where taking picture is just a hobby, and not a event.
Aaaaand weāre stuckĀ inside
For the first month or two of WFH, I spent way too much time online buying shit I donāt need, which includes the Nikon FM. I definitely have no idea how is it gonna make any difference to my X-T1, and even 3 months in, I still havenāt finished a roll of film. While I do enjoy the physicality of the camera, from a logical stand point, it is not a wise purchase decision at all. Thankfully itās not expensive, so I am going to give it a few more months, to see if the process of going to a camera store, get the picture printed, can make the photo more meaningful or personal.
And there is 1 more potential stupid camera gear thatās on itās way: a cheap-ish telephoto zoom lens. Over the last 18 months, I have been using almost exclusive wide angle lens, because āthatās the type of lens for landscape/cityscapeā. And now that I have slightly better understanding of how the focal length of a photo can change the perspective and framing of a picture, I would like to give telephoto lens a shot. I am still very uncomfortable to take photos on the street, because my stupid brain keep saying āyou look dumb as hell, just like all the touristsā, and having a long lens *might* make it slightly more comfortable, since I donāt have to get close to my subject anyway. And after so long with just wide angle lens and having a hard time making effective composition for photos, I am open to trying new things, especially from my the window of my room (no, not as a creep).
In Conclusion,
While I havenāt necessarily āfall in loveā with photography, I think I am much more comfortable to have it be part of my life, my normal-boring-quiet life.
P.S.: The good thing about camera gear is that their value depreciate not that much, relative to other electronics. As long as you are not ābuying the latest and greatestā, itās actually less expensive of a hobby as I expected.