That’s not even funny anymore. Could somebody help me and recommend some GAS remedy? :-)
Yes: buy the tools you need for a particular purpose.
Yes: never sell a tool as you may need it in the future.
Yes: Abandon at once the "Life of Optical Poverty" or "Sell all your lenses, give to the poor and come follow me." --Henri Cartier-Bresson
Stop worrying about GAS. Unless you have embraced the "Life of Optical Poverty" don't try to carry ever lens you own on any particular outing. Take what you think you will need or want and live within your decision, e.g. if you didn't bring a macro lens don't look for flowers, look for a field of flowers.
Who am I to give advice?When did I decide to compare 135 2.8 Q with 10.5 2.5 and then let the 10.5 go? Couple of weeks ago? Month? Then David Hartman came up with thread about 105 and 135 lenses again and you guys chimmed in and BOOM – I was on Yahoo auction site in no time – and guess what? I bought another 10.5 2.5.
Excellent! 105mm and 135mm are unique tools. I like to say they suggest a particular perspective. If you stand a 2m from a person and want a head and shoulders portrait you might choose the 105mm lens. If you stand at the same 2m from a person and choose a 135mm lens you’ll crop to a tight head shot.
You can’t zoom with your feet. You can’t! When you stand in one place and zoom (change focal length) the perspective remains the same but the crop changes as your subject to lens distance remains the same. When you move closer or further from your subject with a constant focal length the crop and the perspective both change. In the lingo of cinema you zoom or dolly.
One way to use a 105mm and 135mm lens is to choose the perspective you want. You can do this without lifting the camera to your face. Once you have chosen you stand where the perspective is what you want and you select the crop by changing lenses or if using a zoom lens you zoom.
There is no wrong way to do this. If you have two lenses or you have a zoom lens you have the flexibility to make choices.
If you have only a 50mm lens you still have the flexablity to make choices.I understand Anne-Sophie Mutter owns two Stradivarius violins. That’s not GAS. She is a professional and needs a backup. Her violins are the tools of her trade. Maybe now she owns three?
Justin Johnson owns perhaps hundreds of blues guitars. They all sound different. Some have 12 strings, some have only one. Eric Clapton as I recall played mostly “Blackie” (a Fender Stratocaster) for years. Their music brings joy to my life: Anne-Sophie, Justin, Eric; violin, guitar. It’s all good.
Dave
If I could sell my soul as Robert Johnson did I might go down to the Crossroads too.