Robert Meier wrote:


But if the carpenter has to work with a kid's plastic toy hammer or a
huge
sledgehammer he will not get the job done well and quick, i.e. to
satisfaction. Of course an artistic painted hammer with a perfect planar
hitting surface is unlikely going to help anything... Unless of course
the
beauty of the hammer gives him an additional boost to do a perfect job,
psychological stuff which in some cases can't be ignored... And all that
applies to cameras, too.

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Robert,

You are changing what he said.  If a skilled carpenter had 
a hammer and saw and a novice had a complete set of tools
I would put money that the carpenter would do a better job.

As to psychological stuff, for amateurs it makes them feel 
better they own the best lenses and then they think about 
the image.  For pros, its the image first, equipment second.

Peter K

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