Why I Shoot on a 20-Year-Old Camera

People often ask why I still walk around with a camera that looks like it belongs in a museum. It’s scratched, slow, and the screen barely works in daylight. I’ve dropped it more times than I can count. But it’s still the first thing I reach for every morning before I head out.

It’s a 2005 digital rangefinder, one of those early models everyone thought was revolutionary at the time. By today’s standards, it’s prehistoric — tiny buffer, clunky autofocus, weak battery. But I love it for all the reasons others wouldn’t.

This camera forces me to be deliberate. It doesn’t let me spray and pray. I can’t shoot ten frames per second — I can shoot one, maybe two, before the buffer chokes. Every photograph feels like a small decision, not a reflex. When I look through the viewfinder, I’m not just framing — I’m committing.

Modern cameras are incredible machines, no question. They see better than the human eye. But sometimes I think that’s the problem. They’re too forgiving. They make it easy to forget that photography isn’t about perfection — it’s about perception.

With this old camera, I get imperfections that feel alive. The highlights blow out like sunlight on a hangover morning. The shadows are rough, grainy, unpredictable. When I look at those files later, they feel like memories, not records.

And maybe that’s the point.
I don’t want to capture what things look like — I want to capture what they felt like.

The city changes fast, and people move faster. Having a piece of gear that slows me down keeps me honest. It reminds me why I started photographing in the first place: to pay attention.

So no, I don’t need the newest body, the latest sensor, or the cleanest noise performance. What I need is a camera that argues with me a little — one that makes me wait, think, and listen before I press the shutter.

That’s what this 20-year-old relic gives me. And honestly, I hope it never dies.