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.

Am I still taking photos in 2020? Kinda

More than a year ago, I wrote about how I wanted to regain my love for photography. Which means itā€™s about time for a quick review.


Now that I looked back at my last article, I canā€™t help but cringe the entire time, mostly because I canā€™t 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 ā€œphotographyā€: 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:

    Main photography gear mid-2020 ( - the iPhone 11 Pro that took thisĀ picture)

    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.

    2010 me: lend my D40 to one of my friend to take pictures, when I participate inĀ javelin

    Now that I am 10 years older, work in a 9ā€“5 job, and havenā€™t went out for anything other then shopping/business for the last 4 months, how I see photography has changed a lot. Itā€™s a lot more about nostalgia of my student days, which probably explains why I am more into retro-looking gears; now itā€™s 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 thatā€™s probably why for the last few years, I have kinda indulge myself in ā€œwhatā€™s the gear that would make it feel like taking pictures with my D40 when I was 16ā€. Well, sadly the answer is ā€œnoneā€.

    I donā€™t 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. Whatā€™s 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 Iā€™ve been missing. Hopefully, I am slowing getting to a point where taking picture is just a hobby, and not a event.

    Aaaaand weā€™re stuckĀ inside

    For the first month or two of WFH, I spent way too much time online buying shit I donā€™t 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 havenā€™t 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 itā€™s 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 thatā€™s on itā€™s way: a cheap-ish telephoto zoom lens. Over the last 18 months, I have been using almost exclusive wide angle lens, because ā€œthatā€™s 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 ā€œyou look dumb as hell, just like all the touristsā€, and having a long lens *might* make it slightly more comfortable, since I donā€™t 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 havenā€™t necessarily ā€œfall 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 ā€œbuying the latest and greatestā€, itā€™s actually less expensive of a hobby as I expected.