Hi Is1222
My DH is a professional photographer and he recommends you go digital.
Its expensive to start with but once you have all of the equipment you never really need hard copy prints again if you have a PC, you can save you images on to a CD/DVD and play them back through your TV.
It can be expensive to produce digital prints especially from an ink jet printer, but most photo labs produce digital prints on conventional photographic paper for a few cents a print and as you only have the prints produced that you want
no more unwanted out of focus, shots of your thumb or photos of the inside of your bag
lol
We are very lucky as he can borrow the hi-spec cameras (Nikon D2x) from work, if he plans to do any quality pictures (as he calls it) and we have an amazing panoramic (60in by 12in) of the Grand Canyon from our West Coast trip last year.
He says like everything in life
you get what you pay for. Even in the point and shoot market all of the big companies (Canon, Nikon) are very similar in quality.
A few tips would be:
Pick a camera that uses removable memory cards, ideally Compact Flash (CF) cards as some point & shoot have a fixed memory, like a hard drive. This means when the memory is full you need to get to a PC to download the images or delete them to free up space to take more, where as a removable card can be changed for another.
Pick a camera that has the highest mega-pixel value (i.e. 5.0 mega pixels) just as 35mm film is made up of tiny silver light sensitive crystals, the higher the mega pixel value the better quality the final image. Dont go below 4.0 mega pixels (unless cost is a real issue.
Also some digital point & shoot cameras have whats called shutter lag, this means when you press the button to take a photo there is a small delay before the camera actually takes the picture and this can result in either a blurring of the photo or missing the action, again this seems to be price related.
As my DH never really wanted to carry a big camera bag on vacation (he does this 5 days a week at work) we sold our 35mm Nikon F90x (on Ebay) and purchased a Canon Power Shot Pro1 in February this year and he now takes this camera everytime we a weekend break or vacation. It is a 8.0 mega pixel camera, with the smallest of shutter lags and the images are fantastic, it was a little expensive at £600 ($1000) but it maybe cheaper in the US.
But he would recommend this one or any of the Nikon coolpix range.
Sorry its a long reply
My DH is dictating what I should say as Im not that clued up on digital photography really
lol
Jue
