Steve's Girl
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 28, 2006
- Messages
- 1,900
What you want would be difficult for even the best photographer with the finest equipment out there.
You can't get away from the fact that the camera has to stay still, especially when your shooting a moving subject. That = tripod, unfortunately - for all of us.
Nobody said it has to be a big tripod, though. You can use a $10 tripod from WalMart. Or a gorillapod. Or the top of a trashcan. But you have to keep the camera perfectly still. There aren't a lot of ways around it (well, maybe a few that the most skilled with the best equipment know).
Learning to work with that alone will change your photography world. Do that before you invest in any new anything.
The simple answer here is that improving your photography SKILLS will help you get the shots you want moreso than running out and buying a new expensive camera.
If once you work with that for a while you still aren't able to get the types of shots you want, then it's time to look at new equipment.
I agree with most of what you are saying - learning and practicing will do more for improving your photography than equipment will. However, I do not use a tripod for parade shots, low-light rides, etc. I find a tripod a little too cumbersome to use when trying to track a moving object. It is very reasonable to be able to stand on the curb and shoot Spectro as long as you have a camera and lens capable of that type of shot and know what settings to use.
).
). Back in the fall of 2006, I posted a similar question on this board regarding upgrading to a DSLR. I received many responses advising me not to get a DSLR because I didn't posses the skills to use it, learn your existing camera first, etc. Well, I did it anyway. I bought a Nikon D80 with a kit lens and soon thereafter bought the 50mm 1.8 lens. And I practiced and learned. And a few months later, I attempted my first night parade at WDW.

