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Five Key Lessons I Had to Learn Before I Turned My Bank Account Into a Camera Graveyard

I used to believe expensive gear was a personality trait. Not a tool. Not equipment. Not even technology. A personality trait. You know the type. The person who buys a camera with enough dynamic range to photograph the collapse of civilization in glorious cinematic color grading, only to use it for blurry photos of their coffee and emotionally distant pigeons. The person who says things like, “This lens has incredible character,” while taking exactly zero memorable photos with it. That was me. At one point, I owned enough camera straps to rig a small sailboat. I had filters, cages, mounts, batteries, chargers, backup chargers for the chargers, and a tripod so heavy it felt less like photography equipment and more like medieval siege machinery. Meanwhile, my actual artistic output looked like a hostage video filmed inside a vape shop. Nobody tells beginners the truth about film and photography gear because the entire industry survives on keeping people in a permanent state of low-...

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