cunim
Well-known member
Perhaps a little story can illustrate my own view.
We had a marketing event going on in which a 1930 Bentley "raced" against a modern Porsche and a Lamborghini. Cameras were incidental but a chopper did follow taking snaps.
I drove the Bentley. After my defeat, the nice fellow in the Lambo took me around the track at some unholy speed.
When he asked how I liked it I said "I almost fell asleep in this thing at 150 mph. At 80 mph in the old car I felt like I was going to die". Point is, it's not how fast you go, it is how fast it feels like you are going. Old cars are magic that way, though you wouldn't want to use them in a modern competitive environment.
As a nonprofessional, it is not the photographs I take. It is how taking them makes me feel. I enjoy both digital and analog, but 8 x 10 has magic.
We had a marketing event going on in which a 1930 Bentley "raced" against a modern Porsche and a Lamborghini. Cameras were incidental but a chopper did follow taking snaps.
I drove the Bentley. After my defeat, the nice fellow in the Lambo took me around the track at some unholy speed.
When he asked how I liked it I said "I almost fell asleep in this thing at 150 mph. At 80 mph in the old car I felt like I was going to die". Point is, it's not how fast you go, it is how fast it feels like you are going. Old cars are magic that way, though you wouldn't want to use them in a modern competitive environment.
As a nonprofessional, it is not the photographs I take. It is how taking them makes me feel. I enjoy both digital and analog, but 8 x 10 has magic.