If I owned a car-manufacturing firm, I’d build a machine with a modern engine and a body shape that recreated the age when cars really had character and personalities. Modern cars seem all the same to me. I can appreciate that certain shapes use less fuel, but why does everything appear to be based on the original Ford Mondeo?
Cameras have been going the same way for some time. The basic SLR shape, with its slim body, bulbous prism head and cylindrical protrusion of a lens at the front obviously works, and we’ve been looking at it again and again over the past 50 years. Canon recently celebrated a half-century in the SLR business and displayed a cabinet of major models throughout that age. As interesting as I found them, it struck me that not much has changed.
I have a limited collection of cameras, none of which is really worth anything but all of which are interesting from a visual or innovation point of view. They are, on the whole, beautiful and inspiring to look at and to use. If this new Olympus Micro Four Thirds body (see News this week) really does resemble the wonderful Pen half-frame cameras of the 1960s, it will be a very welcome change.
To take part in our poll What kind of camera design would you prefer? head to the homepage.
Thanks for playing
Damien


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