Since very early on, I was exposed to the world of photography through my mother. She loved taking pictures of us.
She married my father at fifteen years of age. Had her first daughter Maribel before 16. Biembenida came second at 18, me at 20, and finally my younger sister Rosa at 26. Most of my early memories of her smiling face are of her holding a tiny 110 camera that she used to take our pictures. An extremely popular 16mm point and shoot camera of the 70s and early 80s.
When I formed my own family in the late 90s, I followed the tradition and bought myself a consumer-grade 35mm camera. I took hundreds of pictures. I believe I was influenced by my beautiful mother to do just that. And I did. Anxiously recording everything for later days.
There are many camera types. The best known ones are the digital point and shoot cameras that come in all colors and mega pixel sizes. Those replaced 35mm film consumer-grade bodies of of the late 80s and 90s. They are called point and shoot because all you have to do is point and shoot, and you have your picture.
Other more advanced models are within the category of pro-consumer and professional. They come with better optics, and more buttons that allow more freedom for creative control. However, they are built with fixed lenses and do not provide as much creative freedom as the lesser known but more advanced SLR's bodies. SLR refers to Single Lens Reflex. What this just means is that what you see through the viewfinder or screen is what the lens is actually seeing, as opposed to the consumer grade 35mm ones that had one hole for the viewfinder, and one for the lens. SLR's best feature is the freedom using interchangeable lenses of different angles and lengths. This is the ultimate creative control.
There are several types of SLRs digital cameras. The professional SLR comes with a full-frame, 35mm sensor. They call them like that because most consumer-grade digital cameras on the market have a sensor size much more smaller than 35mm. To a digital camera, a sensor is what records the image. Because the technology is relatively new, that little electronic, light- sensitive piece of equipment is the most expensive part in the camera body. The bigger it is, the more expensive the camera.
Similar to a film camera, the size of the film is what tells you what format the camera is. A 35mm film SLR (or full sensor) camera is the standard professional format found on the market today. There are other formats, like the medium format camera, which is widely used in studio photography, and which film size/sensor is much larger than the 35mm one. A large format camera is the type of camera that has an 8x10 sensor/film size, and is mostly used for architecture and landscape photography.
Last but not least, regardless of what is said about which camera is best: the one that takes the picture is you. Our ability to see light and capture the best moment is what makes you and me a photographer. A camera is just an instrument, like a piano or a violin. Who we end up admiring is the one that took the picture.
Thanks for reading.
Hans Gonzalez.

