It Doesn’t Matter What Camera You Use

People ask me all the time what camera I use.

“What lens was that?”
“What settings did you use?”
“Is it full frame?”
“What f-stop?”

And I get it. When you start photography, gear feels like the missing piece. You think if you just knew the right camera, the right lens, the right numbers, everything would suddenly click.

But here’s something that made me smile recently.

One of my models told me she was talking to another photographer and he said something like, “That Arnold never talks about his settings or his gear.”

And honestly… he’s right.

Not because I’m hiding anything.
But because I genuinely don’t care that much about it.

The Myth of the Perfect Camera

There’s this idea floating around that better gear automatically means better photos.

And yes, good equipment helps. I’m not pretending it doesn’t.

But gear is not what makes someone stop scrolling.

What makes people stop is a feeling.

Warmth.
Freedom.
Energy.
Connection.

When someone looks at one of my photos, they don’t ask themselves what lens I used. They react to the atmosphere. The light. The mood. The moment.

And that has way more to do with intention than with equipment.

What Are You Actually Trying To Say?

Before every shoot, I ask myself one simple question.

What do I want this to feel like?

Not what do I want it to look like.
What do I want it to feel like.

Is it playful?
Is it intimate?
Is it wild?
Is it calm?

Because once you know that, everything else starts aligning naturally.

Your framing changes.
Your direction changes.
Even your editing choices start to make more sense.

The technical side becomes a tool instead of the goal.

Yes, Gear Helps… But It’s Not The Point

Of course the camera matters. It makes things easier. It gives you more flexibility.

But if you don’t know what you want to show, the best gear in the world won’t suddenly give your photos meaning.

I’ve always felt that the eye behind the camera matters more than the camera itself.

Because the camera records what you see.
It doesn’t decide what you see.

Light Will Always Beat Gear

If there is one thing that transformed my work more than any new camera body, it was understanding light.

Sunrise.
Sunset.
Those first and last two hours of the day where everything softens and breathes a little differently.

Have you ever noticed how skin looks warmer during golden hour?
How shadows stop feeling harsh?
How the entire atmosphere suddenly feels cinematic without you doing anything?

That light will flatter someone more than any expensive lens ever could.

Even on a phone. Try it once and you’ll see what I mean.

And that’s not an insult to gear.
That’s a reminder of what actually matters.

Training Your Eye Instead of Your Wallet

One of the best things you can do as a photographer has nothing to do with buying anything.

Start paying attention to light when you’re not shooting.

Sometimes I’m just driving around with Wendy, my girlfriend, and suddenly I’ll go, “Oh look… look at that light.”
It might be hitting a random building.
Someone waiting at a bus stop next to a busy road.
Nothing special… until the light touches it.

And in that moment everything changes.

Those are the little things that train your eye.

Not new gear.
Not new presets.
Just noticing.

When you start seeing those moments in everyday life, photography stops being something you switch on during a shoot.
It becomes the way you look at the world.

The Realisation

Over time, I stopped obsessing over gear and started focusing on intention.

What am I showing?
What does it feel like?
What story is this light helping me tell?

And honestly, that shift changed my photography more than any piece of equipment ever did.

So yeah… people still ask me what camera I use.

And I understand why.

But the real answer is always the same.

It’s not the camera that makes the photo feel alive.
It’s the eye behind it.

If this resonates with you, if it changes the way you think about your photography or even your own creative confidence, feel free to send me a DM. I’m always happy to talk about it and help where I can.

Have an amazing day,

Arnold ✌🏻

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