MarkBarbieri
Semi-retired
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2006
- Messages
- 6,172
I'm generally a stickler about not borrowing money to buy luxuries. It doesn't make much sense to me to impovrish the future "me" to pamper the current "me". I've never quite understood borrowing money and paying significant interest costs to have a vacation now, instead of saving the money and taking the vacation later.
So my question is, should photography equipment be an exception? Unlike a vacation, a book, a TV, or some other luxury expense, there is an irrecoverable loss to waiting on buying a camera. If I don't by that book today, I can usually buy it next year. If I don't buy that camera today, I will miss some pictures forever.
What do you think? Is there a meaningful distinction between buying a camera/camcorder that allows you to capture things for posterity versus buying something that you can defer? Would you be any more likely to finance a camera as compared to something like a vacation, a bigger TV, or better furniture?
Would you distinguish between buying a basic camera that allows you to get reasonable pictures versus financing a new/better camera that doesn't let you get many pictures that you would have missed but makes those pictures better?
I'm not looking for personal advice. I just thought it was an interesting philosophical question.
So my question is, should photography equipment be an exception? Unlike a vacation, a book, a TV, or some other luxury expense, there is an irrecoverable loss to waiting on buying a camera. If I don't by that book today, I can usually buy it next year. If I don't buy that camera today, I will miss some pictures forever.
What do you think? Is there a meaningful distinction between buying a camera/camcorder that allows you to capture things for posterity versus buying something that you can defer? Would you be any more likely to finance a camera as compared to something like a vacation, a bigger TV, or better furniture?
Would you distinguish between buying a basic camera that allows you to get reasonable pictures versus financing a new/better camera that doesn't let you get many pictures that you would have missed but makes those pictures better?
I'm not looking for personal advice. I just thought it was an interesting philosophical question.