dougdeep
New member
Ask Roz.
Out of interest, why do you want a DSLR rather than, say, a compact system?
I think the latter suit the needs of most people (non-pros) these days.
It only suits those who want snapshots. There is hardy any control with a compact. You can't get good bokah and the camera decides for you what you are trying to capture. It completely ruins any creativity you have.Out of interest, why do you want a DSLR rather than, say, a compact system?
I think the latter suit the needs of most people (non-pros) these days.
... who recommends a D3200 as an entry-level DSLR.Ask Roz.
You can't get good bokah and the camera decides for you what you are trying to capture. It completely ruins any creativity you have.
Having a mirror doesn't mean there is no difference between the quality of different cameras. There's little to choose between Canon and Nikon, simply because they both make great cameras.I think you will probably decide on either Cannon or Nikon (no real difference just personal taste) to be honest as they use a mirror lense rather than a processor
Indeed. I remember a visit to Shugborough Hall, in Staffordshire, with a group of people who had each been given a cheap Boots 'throw-away' camera, with the challenge to take the best photo of the day. The guy who won was the only one of us who had the nerve to approach Lord Patrick Lichfield, who owned Shugborough, and ask him to take a few snaps.Bokah? I disagree, a good photographer can get a good pic with almost any camera.
Alternatively go for this bad boy, it's my own holy grail...one day!!
http://www.amazon.co.uk/Leica-M9-18...8&qid=1370124133&sr=1-4&keywords=leica+camera
Indeed. I remember a visit to Shugborough Hall, in Staffordshire, with a group of people who had each been given a cheap Boots 'throw-away' camera, with the challenge to take the best photo of the day. The guy who won was the only one of us who had the nerve to approach Lord Patrick Lichfield, who owned Shugborough, and ask him to take a few snaps.
(1) Dont get hung up on megapixels,unless you are going to print above A2 size 10MP will be more than enough.
(2)You wont even look twice at a Hundredth of the pictures you take let alone print them.But you will still make a DVD copy to back up the copy on your Hard Drive and stick them all on your choice of external storage,some use "the Cloud" others take up offers of storage with their email provider,I have a terabyte external HD for mine.
(3)You will need a massive memory card (mine has 16GB ) and you still wont trust point (2) and still be reluctant to delete any pictures on it.
(4) Good editing software will make a massive improvement to your efforts an editing pictures can be fun but you still wont print them
(5) Photoshop is ****ing expensive and hard work so ignore (4)
(6) If you have experience of the concepts of 35mm film, The standard 50mm lens was designed so that in a given print size.When taking a portrait the proportion of subject to background was the same as the human eye would see it. Therefore a 200mm 35 mm film lens would give a subject 4 times larger as a proportion of background. DSLR lenses are generally half that. For a 35 mm film camera zoom lens of say 70mm-210 the DSLR equivelent is roughly 35-105 mm.
Probably looking around the £500 mark, is that good or tight arse?
Thanks all for the advice, very helpfull
It only suits those who want snapshots. There is hardy any control with a compact. You can't get good bokah and the camera decides for you what you are trying to capture. It completely ruins any creativity you have.
Of course the skill of the photographer is important, but the camera is too. As Ziggy says, a DSLR gives you the freedom to make the shot how you want it. If you happen to want a candid portrait with nice bokah, that's going to be a lot easier with a DSLR than with a compact.Bokah? I disagree, a good photographer can get a good pic with almost any camera.
Bokah? I disagree, a good photographer can get a good pic with almost any camera.
This. And invest in some good editing software.... use RAW alone. Under/overexpose a shot in JPEG and you've lost the shot forever. Do the same in RAW and you can correct the exposure later and bring out detail you didn't even know was there.
f@ck me, is that antique at that price!!
Canon and Nikon are both great makes, but don't overlook Sony, they have come on in leaps and bounds over the last few years. (For what it's worth I have a Canon and quite a lot of glass)
I would go to >>>>>here<<<<<
There is so much info on that site you will not only be able to come away with an informed choice but quite possibly with some added knowledge of Digital photography.
I totally agree. Quality images come from quality glass, and Sony are way behind in that category.definitely overlook sony - go with nikon or canon.
if £500 is your budget go with either a 600d or 650d, not sure what the nikon equivalent is, maybe a d3100 or d5100.