Sunday I had just some time off and went for a small drive out. Suddenly the light was pretty cool and I regretted having forgotten my dslr.
Think that is where they make the clouds.
All taken with a phone cam.
By Dieter Orens | 0 Reactions so far…
Sunday I had just some time off and went for a small drive out. Suddenly the light was pretty cool and I regretted having forgotten my dslr.
Think that is where they make the clouds.
All taken with a phone cam.
By Dieter Orens | 0 Reactions so far…
When I decided to upgrade from a point & shoot digital camera to a dslr in May 2007, this was for a good reason: none of the rules of photography I had learned could really be applied to my Canon A540.
Really long exposures were impossible due to the 15 seconds limit, but what really bothered me, was aperture. On my old Practica TL1000 I knew what I was doing, and I knew what to expect. On a P&S this is almost impossible. First of all, the aperture range is very limited, most of the time from f/1.4 to f/8.0, and secondly, it doesn't really matter what you set it to, the sensor size is so small, that your depth of field will almost always be huge, unless you go tele and very close.
For a good introduction on the difference between sensor sizes and how they relate to depth of field, go to this tutorial on the cambridgeincolour website.
So, being fed up with all that, I decided to go for a DSLR. If there's one thing that I knew if I should go for a Digital Single Lens Reflex camera, is that it was gonna cost me. After having decided on how much I was willing to spend, countless days of reading reviews, sleepless nights of guilt (do I really need such a camera?) and hours of holding different cams, I went into the shop and bought myself the Nikon D80 with the 18-135mm kit lens. I do not agree with Ken Rockwell about this lens being a waste of money though. As a first lens and being in the kit, I think it's the best you can get for little money with a great zoom range and it can be sharp as hell.
At the time of my decision, there were 4 rather new models for me to choose from: the Canon 400D, the Sony Alpha 100, the Pentax K10D and the Nikon D80. Now they're not all completely equal as some say the Pentax is one pretty step beyond the other ones, with the D80 in between, but in practice I think they pretty much compete with each other.
Now here's five simple reasons why I didn't regret my choice:
Now, of course there are things that my D80 does not have compared to some of the other models:
Currently I'm shooting everything on complete manual mode and in the RAW format, so all the other nice options like in-camera image-editing possibilities and shooting modes do not really apply to me, although they are a nice touch.
Note that none of the cams I compared are full frame sensors, so what I told before, about 'rules of photography not completely applying' is true a little bit for these too, although it comes a hell of a lot closer to normal photography. Moreover, buying a digital full frame sensor cam is way over my budget.
There's one more thing that I would love to see implemented though. On the D80 we have this 'func' button on the front side, quite easy accessible when looking through the viewfinder, and that can be programmed to one of several different functions. I have mine set at ISO. So when I press it, I can see the ISO on the display and in my viewfinder. Now the one thing I hate about this, is that pressing it doesn't let me change it by using one of the wheels. To change it, I still have to press the ISO button at the back, which is pretty annoying as this button is not at an ergonomical position. I think this feature can't be too hard to implement in a firmware update.
Besides that, it will be most of all me that needs upgrading instead of the cam.
Now, in a perfect world, there would be only one cam with the most efficient features of all of them. Alas we live in a throwaway-society with too much crap on the so-called 'free market'.
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