Is it even possible to save for college anymore? It's so expensive.
You're probably going in debt. So maybe the money gets spent now or gets absorbed by college. If absorbed by college, it might be a little less interest on a student loan later.
Which is to say, it might not matter either way. If you take out more loans, you just pay more in interest later. So the price of camera now... plus x% of extra money you take out in loans, that's the true price. But if you pay off the loans over many years in the fuutre, you might not notice. Of course the loan interest compounds on itself...
After going through it all, you might consider stashing it away somewhere. Not as numbers in a bank. A safe deposit box maybe. And don't tell anyone. The government and school take your finances into account. They don't need to know everything. Your parents will probably find a practical way for you to spend it too. The less people know, the better.
I don't see saving for college being that realistic anymore. Not for paying the full amount. You're going in debt. $200, $2,000... It won't make that big of a difference in the long run.
I guess I'd hold onto the money now. Only spend it if you really want something. You have to live too -- If you skimp on everything, that's your quality of life... Times x-number of years.
And when you graduate (assuming you graduate), you'll have that music degree so you can get a job to start paying off those loans. Hahaha.... If you get a federal loan, you can never get out of it.
If you're doing piano performance, you're going for a doctorate... Bachelors in performance, masters in perf/ped maybe, doctorate.... You're going to be in debt.
So you just take a few more students in the future. Work a little harder.
What are you going to buy in college?
Tuition. I think you said you had a scholarship. That could disappear (Organizations might back out, yadda, yadda, yadda... Any 'contract' you sign if for you, not for a big organization. They might back out of it if something happens like "... the financial climate has changed and the previous agreement is no longer feasible" ... even if everything's signed and agreed on. I've seen that happen a few times since 2008.)
There will be something that the scholarship doesn't actually cover -- Fees, extra fees, non-departmental activity fees that weren't part of that scholarship. Surprise.
Books, paper (if you need it), pens, pencils, etc.
Crap for a residence hall room.
Laundry
Food, room and board <-- Decent percentage of spending
Car, car insurance, gas money
any other travelling expenses, unless you stay at college the whole time
Health insurance if it's not with your school. That might be a 'surprise, scholarship doesn't cover that' expense.
Clothes
Rent if you get an apartment, utility bills with that. Cable/internet if you get that. Etc.
Phone service, if you get that.
Probably a computer. Assuming you do it all in four years, you'll probably need a new computer at some point.
You'll probably have to buy gifts for people.
"Supporting" a girlfriend or significant other. They want to go out and do things. $$$
Just browsing the other comments...
Yes, performance clothes. Probably a tux. You could rent one, but if you wear it more than once a semester it's cheaper to just buy one.
Emergency saving -- A buffer is a good idea. With all the left over money you have.
I think your a music major, so you don't have to worry about lessons. The professors will be happy to give you private lessons though -- They still have their own student loans to pay off. Haha.
If you're performance... Are you really going to have time for a job? You'd actually devote time to something non-music when you're trying to compeete with masters and doctorale-level people... Ones who are there now, ones who graduated, ones who graduated and are out there somewhere practicing? There's not enough time with 24 hours in a day.
Not to fear -- The government and others will be standing by with loans available. Easily available. You just pay them the interest. And you don't have to pay until you graduate, so you can ignore it all while you're in school. Once you're out, you'll be a modern day indentured servant. Haha. When you graduate, you'll *have* to find a job soon to start paying off those loans which will be accruing interest by then. In your field, not in your field, just something to start paying it back. Probably not for the amount you thought you'd make either.
So... It probably won't matter whether you buy something now or not.