Let's look at an extreme example: One guy (or girl, no sexism
here) is holding a P&S, the guy next to him is holding an all-black
rig with battery grip, honking lens, a big flash with a pocket
softbox mounted to a t-press stroboframe, and a quantum battery for
his flash hanging off his belt.
Yes, these are two extremes -- one comprising numerous factors that
give the aura of professionalism and the other giving none. black
vs. silver. softbox vs. none. powerful ext flash vs. popup
penlight. etc. etc.
Which guy, right or wrong in the eyes of the civilians (99% of the
population), will be viewed with more "respect"?
While WE know that camera color matters not, it does contribute in
it's subtle way, to the overall perception being formed by others.
Combined with all the other components, the black vs. silver
component is probably unnoticed. But if you are lacking the
components in the "extreme" example above, then the black color may
contribute larger to others perception.
I recently shot a friend's wedding as simply a bystander, ex. not
the hired gun. But I brought my standard rig with me. I was very
careful not to interfere with the hired gun, but when I approached
a setup, they not only remained in posture for me, but all the
relatives with their P&S's backed off while I got my shots --
withone word one from me.
Others wanted to know if I would work for them. I wasn't even
advertising except by virtue of the my appearance and the
perception formed by those watching me.
This may sound like horsesh!t, but companies spend ALOT of money on
psychographic studies to determine just this sort of thing. Human
perception and opinion formation is a strange thing.
JMHO...
I keep reading about complains regarding the build quality of the
300D. And I just want to ask... wat's up with that?
Does a camera have to be made of metal to be good? Even if it is
made of metal, will you throw it around anyhow? Someone dropped the
DRebel down some stairs and it survived. Is that strong enough
build? Let's say the metal body can survive a greater drop, but
your lens and whatever mechanics inside the camera won't!
And then there's the colour thing. What's wrong with silver? Does
being black make a camera better? I quite like the silver colour
actually; at least it doesn't make the camera look like some
antique from the days of yore. You know, if the 300D came in white
to match the L lenses, then maybe people will like it better.
I think people who are used to the old metallic SLRs may not be
used to the 300D, but that's no reason to say that it's one of its
weak points. In fact, being made of plastic makes it lighter and
becomes one of its greatest advantages!
Sorry of the rant, but it's getting late and my experiments didn't
work
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