I think I am ready to make the plunge to a DSLR camera. I have a point nad shoot that I'm just not really pleased with now that I have a baby. This is what I want in my camera: no lag time in between taking pictures, will not take blurry pics of moving baby/child, good zoom and quality, and more crisp photos. I have been looking at Canon T3, T3i, or T2i. The lens it comes with is 18-55mm. I have also been recommended to get a 50mm as well.
What are the main differences between these three? If I get the T3 I can add on the 50mm now. If I get one of the pricier ones (T3i or T2i) I will have to wait a few months to get it.
Will the kit lens alone be okay for taking pictures since I am just starting out?
We will be going to WDW in 3 weeks and I would love to take it with me and get better pictures there. Will the 18-55mm lens be okay for the trip?
Any other recommendations? Thanks so much!!
I'll echo what many of the previous posters have already said: getting a dSLR camera doesn't automatically mean the end to blurry photos. It is still very possible to get blurry photos using a dSLR camera.
There are 2 different reasons why photos are blurry: motion blur and out of focus. To avoid blurriness due to focusing problems, be sure to learn about how to choose the correct focus point when you take your picture, so that the camera knows exactly what you want it to focus on.
Blurry pictures of a moving baby/child are probably due to motion blur. I'm going to guess that you were trying to take pictures of your baby in low light conditions. When cameras see low light conditions, they typically use a slower shutter speed to let more light into the camera. However, when using slower shutter speeds, you run the risk of blurriness due to the motion of your subject (your baby) and blurriness due to camera shake.
The key to avoiding motion blur is to use faster shutter speeds. Faster shutter speeds can "freeze" the subject and prevent motion blur. However, faster shutter speeds let less light into the camera, potentially making for an underexposed (too dark) photo. In this case, you should then use a larger aperture and/or higher ISO to let the camera "see more light". This is how shutter speed, aperture, and ISO all interact with each other to form the "exposure triangle". When you learn about the basics of photography, you will learn how these 3 things interact with each other to make a properly exposed photograph.
In terms of what you listed for what you want to camera, pretty much all dSLR's have little to no lag time in between taking pictures. Probably the slowest dSLR camera will let you take up to 3 photos per second in continuous burst mode. That should be pretty fast for general purposes.
In terms of blurry pictures of moving baby/child, the key to this is faster shutter speeds, as I mentioned above.
A "good zoom" is more dependent on the lens than it is on the camera. Remember that you can actually change lenses on a dSLR camera, so that if you don't have enough focal length (don't have enough zoom), you can always switch to a different lens that has a longer focal length (has more zoom).
For "more crisp photos", they will likely depend on proper focusing techniques, such as selecting the correct focus point on your camera, as I mentioned above. It will also depend on using a fast enough shutter speed to prevent motion blur. In general, dSLR cameras can and do provide "more crisp photos" than point-and-shoot cameras, but much of this is also dependent on the photographer as well.
There are plenty of websites out there that compared the Canon T3, T3i, and the T2i. You can honestly take great pictures with any of these dSLR cameras, no matter which of these cameras you end up choosing.