A pro-level camera system won’t make a great photographer. It can’t create composition or find the right light. It doesn’t get you “the eye.” But in the hands of a professional, a pro-level setup has emotive powers way beyond that of your smartphone’s camera. For a camera kit, the type of photography plays a large part of what gear is used, so we asked five professional photographers with diverse professional backgrounds: food, adventure, landscape, outdoors and wedding photography, about the type of setups they use, and why. These are the systems that have helped them hone their craft. That, and years and years and years and years of practice.
Daniel Krieger
Food Photographer at The New York Times

“The people who usually have the biggest [Instagram] audiences are heavy on the macro — on the close-up stuff. I don’t really like doing that. You do it once in awhile, but I try to care more about composition. I feel like if you’re doing too much macro photography, you’re getting too close in, then you’re losing the ability to compose. I like composing with objects, you know, outside of the food, using the table and more of the landscape.” – Daniel Krieger (Instagram: @danielkrieger)