Well, I didn't make it, but we did buy it. Yes, the camera. I had contacted KEH, a camera store in Atlanta that buys and sells used equipment, regarding buying some old Hasselblad equipment that we have hauled around for years, with no purpose. It's a great camera - it's what we used in the studio before switching to digital, so it has been sitting unused for at least 23 years.
KEH gave me a price on the gear, which seemed fair, considering the limited demand. Then, when we checked on getting this camera at a local camera shop (and those are hard to find anymore), we found out that KEH was going to be in their store this week, to buy used equipment. Bottom line: if the price was the same, it would save me having to package this stuff up to ship it (they pay for the shipping on transactions over $300).
Today was our day to go there. We dug out some other camera gear to see what they would give us for that, as well. It turned out to be a bit of a wait, as the people from KEH were having trouble getting on-line in the camera store (they were set up in a room in back). When it was our turn, we put the gear down on the table and were told to "sit over there"... I'm guessing they didn't want people "explaining" what the camera gear was all about. With the other gear (a film Nikon, a DSLR Nikon, some lenses, and a small Lumix (ZS 100).
All totaled, it was nearly equal to the price of the camera I was buying. Yes, I am happy with that trade! The camera: a Sony a6700...
It came from the local camera store, not KEH, but we got an additional 10% on our trade by selecting "store credit." What's not to like about that?!
When we first went into the camera shop, the lady I had been dealing with on the Sony said, "Good to see you again. We have your camera and lens set aside - is this the Hasselblad equipment you're trading?"
There were 3 other young ladies behind the counter, and some "OOOing and AHHHing" when they heard "Hasselblad." I pulled the 500CM out of the case and let them get hands on it. They were in awe of the camera and the fact that we made our living with these years ago.
Now, I need to get out and shoot some photos and video with this new camera!
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Testing the new A6700: it was after sunset when I got out to shoot some test shots. I left the ISO on auto, which out of the box keeps it at 800; I'll be setting it higher than that in some more testing, but I wanted to see how the camera would be right out of the box.
Test shots of Murphy, Joan, Steph, and Rubina (the black lab) in low light. When Rubina is in play mode, she is a blur to your eyes... and with the show shutter speed, that's how she looked. I'll start the tests with a portrait of Murphy, sitting still...
A back-lit shot of one of Joan's cactus plants...
Steph and Rubina...
Rubina at rest...
Rubina whizzing all around Murphy, and Murph standing his ground...
I'm impressed with how the camera handles the low light situation. The 16mm to 50mm zoom lens has a variable f/stop, the 85mm lens (with that first shot of Murphy) is tack sharp with nice bokeh (softening of the background through a shallow depth of field).
I need to do some studying so I can just shoot without too much thinking; build some muscle memory for where the switches and dials are located. I'll get the opportunity to get some daylight images and video tomorrow.
2 comments:
Congrats on the trade-in. It is always a good thing to get decent salvage value out of gear that you no longer use. I need to do the same with scuba gear and kayaks come spring. I'm afraid that my old 35 mm Minolta XD-11 camera, motor drive, accessories, Vivitar flash and lenses have no real value at this point.
I was surprised how much that old stuff brought. It's worth a shot to look up KEH (in Atlanta) and see what your gear might bring. Facebook Marketplace or Craigslist for the scuba gear and kayaks. We sold our kayaks on a Facebook neighborhood group... someone that was vacationing there bought one, and a guy who lived a couple blocks away bought the Hobie kayak. It could happen! ;-)
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