jsbn said:I dun think this uncle is so rich to afford 1DsMkIII for his nieces when he can barely afford a 20D himself.![]()
alechim said:DIE!!!!! if my family even think of touching my camera! I only lend those who knows about DSLR!
Since she do not know about photpgraphy then advise her to use a PnS loh...tell her by not understanding a DSLR will result in getting lousy photos, definitely she do not wanna come back home without a single nice shot
whoever touches my camera at home!DarkForce said:You mean you die or the camera die ? :bsmilie:
azul123 said:If you feel that by not lending, it will cause friction between your families then go ahead, but try giving her the cheaper zoom lens and keep the good lens at home, if she don't know the difference then all should be ok.
Ah Pao said:How about setting up some conditions for the loan? Kekeke...
Seriously, talk to her about how precious you DSLR is to you lor...drill into her skull that this camera is PRECIOUS to you and only out of goodwill you lend it to her - if she's the careless kind then make it clear to her that she's responsible for any scratches or damages to your "precious".
bluz said:camera = "material" which is replaceable
cousin = family (loved ones!)
i just lost my cousin and no amount of money could get her back. if you love your cousin lend it to her.
**do you know that there is an Award winning Clubsnapper who would lend his DSLR (then it was a Nikon D2H) to other clubsnappers?
chngpe01 said:Hi Bluz, haven't seen you for quite awhile here. sorry to hear about your cousin. Agree with you on that about family.
Take care
PE
Wah fierce lah...alechim said:whoever touches my camera at home!
We're looking like... 10yrs?DarkForce said:By the time your nieces grow up , camera price will drop liao![]()
20D by that time should be cheap.
Try a 400mm DO on the body.Belle&Sebastain said:i know i know! put a very small memory card for her, once she run out of space she will not shoot anymore, if someone will to borrow a camera most likely they will not buy a memory card and europe will cost much more. She will keep the camera lan lan!
otherwise load the most biggest lens, battery grip so that it will tire her before she could use it 24-28mm 2.8 thereabouts or put a weird focal length for her, eg a fisheye or a prime 50mm or 100mm macro and say my camrea cannot zoom one.
photography is all about being creative!
Benign said:An ex friend of mine borrowed a mint Minolta9000, and returned it with crack LCD + numerous scratches and dents. :angry:
Benign said:An ex friend of mine borrowed a mint Minolta9000, and returned it with crack LCD + numerous scratches and dents. :angry:
This is the biggest crock of baloney. Cousin is NOT family. Family can push a bit, relatives, absolutely not. If by not lending the camera, the relationship will be damaged, it is not a relationship that is worth saving.bluz said:camera = "material" which is replaceable
cousin = family (loved ones!)
i just lost my cousin and no amount of money could get her back. if you love your cousin lend it to her.
**do you know that there is an Award winning Clubsnapper who would lend his DSLR (then it was a Nikon D2H) to other clubsnappers?
hahahaha....Sion said:Make a "DSLR" label and stick it on your cute little camera. He/She won't notice. :sweatsm:
That's the problem you see.Deadpoet said:This is the biggest crock of baloney. Cousin is NOT family. Family can push a bit, relatives, absolutely not. If by not lending the camera, the relationship will be damaged, it is not a relationship that is worth saving.
Using your lost of your cousin as a comparison is low. Lending camera has absolutely nothing to do with life and death!!! Lending camera has nothing to do with love. In the first place, ibite's cousin should not have asked.
Another apple and orange comparison, and that happens all too oftern, lending a D2H to another CSers, the camera stays in Singapore, the period it was lend out is much shorter, and the person borrowing it knows who to handle a camera! We are talking about lending a camera for a week or two, maybe longer, to someone who has no idea how to handle the camera, "play play, try try" as ibet said herself, and to be taken on a trip to Europe.
My advise to ibite, bid farewell to your DSLR, when it comes back, if it comes back, it will never be the same again!