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smilie in place of the real @
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Do not understand all this having to take a picture of yourself. After all these years looking in the mirror in the morning, they ought to know what they look like.
In a pinch, it can be fun to capture something that would never have otherwise been captured (because who carries a camera with them anymore).
I hate waiting for people to take phone pics... and the old 5 second rule (I believe in 3 seconds) has now become "wait a second while I figure this all out again."
I still carry a camera with me quite often, but then most of you know that anyway, always on the lookout for that perfect photo... :rapture:
A friend of mine has traveled extensively all over the world, I asked him once if he ever took a camera (this was before smart phones came along) and he just simply traveled and as he put it... "kept the memories in my head"

From early teens 'til about age fifty there was a camera either on me or within arms' reach. Hundreds of thousands of images. If it moved I shot it, if it was static I shot it twice. :smirk: Things like the Edmund Fitzgerald dockside in Ashtabula harbor in the '60's, USAF air-to-air shots of dozens of aircraft and different operations, family events for decades, Formula-1 events, tear sheets out of numerous publications from local and international outfits. I quit buying photo gear and started seriously getting into computer stuff in about 1990. The "digital revolution" saw me completely changing horses. Now that every man and his dog has a camera clipped to their belt I'm glad of the change.
Being a professional panderer in reflected light images is a tough way to earn a living today. I call myself a reformed photojournalist now.![]()