usewickhouse
<font color=magenta>I am going to stick to my firs
- Joined
- Sep 25, 2005
- Messages
- 1,130


Master Mason said:Just my opinion, but if you have been shooting with a film SLR, you will never be truely happy with any point and shoot.
I went to the P&S world for a while, but I was never happy with the pictures, yes it was easy, and having you camera fit in your pocket is a great convience, but the picture quality will never be the same.
Thanks for all your help and everyone else's too. You have all made me second guess my thougts of getting the Digital P&S? I think he bought a Sony 8MP but he has not given it to me yet. I will try to get him to let me have it tonight so I can see what kind it is so I can go look it up and read the reviews. So from what I can gather you are all saying is that your Digital SLR's take AWESOME pictures? I have a film SLR Canon Rebel which takes great picts but not as good as my OLD Canon AE1 programable. That old camera still takes the clearest pictures. I am so glad I asked about these cameras before I opened the box. I would have never known they did not have good quality, THANKS!!Master Mason said:Yes I am talking any kind of P&S. They will take some great pictures. Just take a look at some of those you see on the board. But I know that I was never as happy with them as I am with the ones I can get from my dSLR. I think that having the control that the SLR gives you can not be duplicated in a p&s.
So it becomes a trade off, ease vs quality.
If you know the camera he bought look at steves or dpreview and see what they say about that model. They have very good reviews there.
Using a DSLR is no guarantee of great pictures. A good P&S camera will take excellent images with a lot less user input than what a DSLR requires. So many people who move up to DSLRs from a quality P&S are dissapointed with the results due to the fact that the P&S does much more incamera processing (sharpening, saturation, etc.) than a DSLR. If you want creative control of your images and don't mind the amount of user input required to get great images a DSLR needs, get a DSLR. If you want to get great pictures without alot of fuss and don't feel like carrying around a big DSLR and whichever lenses and accessories you feel you need, get a quality P&S camera. If you do some research at sites such as www.dpreview.com and www.stevesdigicams.com and purchase a quality P&S camera, you may very well be much happier with the smaller P&S camera.usewickhouse said:. So from what I can gather you are all saying is that your Digital SLR's take AWESOME pictures?
usewickhouse said:So from what I can gather you are all saying is that your Digital SLR's take AWESOME pictures?
In your opinion what type and brand should I buy? I want something that is easy to use, takes good to great pics, and does not need a lot of lenses and extras. I am a complete novice and just really want to take photos that will stand the test of time of my family. We go on several mini vacations a year and I never end up taking pics due to hating to get out my Film SLR. Yes it takes great pics but I end up having to lug it everywhere. We have 2 kiddos and right now I just really wanted something that was easy but GREAT. I know he bought the Sony 8MP, should I return it for the 6MP? Or just get a Film P&S and stay clear of digital? Thanks for you advice!! It really is wonderful to have the DIS to ask about this stuff!!manning said:Take a look at the Sony H2 & H5, Canon S3is, Panasonic Fz50,Fz7 TZ1. They are 12x zoom camera. The Sonys use memory sticks, Canon and Panasonic SD cards.
I own 4 canon film SLR cameras. Used them professionally and recreationally. Loved them. Now I have a Canon G1, Sony F707, T1, H5, Panasonic TZ1. Love them all.
Key to getting amazing pictures...knowing how to use them.
Why I don't have DSLR? Just got tired of hauling all that stuff around. Great cameras, just don't want to carry all that stuff around.
Also I get the pictures I want.
Don't get caught up in the pixel race. The CCDs have to be small to have small cameras. The more pixels you put on the same size CCD the noisier they tend to get. If you do not plan on doing super cropping the most you need is around 5-7 MP. More 5 than 7.
Good grief, don't do THAT!usewickhouse said:Or just get a Film P&S and stay clear of digital?
Gee you sure have me beyond confused. Okay you asked me what I wanted and to be honest I don't think I know? I really just want a small, liteweight camera that I can throw in my purse but one that takes really great photos. I do not want to mess with lenses and flash. I have that in my film SLR. I really wanted a digital P&S that I could take with me anywhere, one that takes great pics and one that I could email my family some pics of my kids. I do not need a professional setup. I am in lala land thinking that there is a digital P&S out there that will fit these needs? I know you all must be flustered with me but I am new to the photog boards as well as digital photog. I know everyone has a different view due to their own personal needs and wants. I am going to take ALL of your points of view do some research and make a decision this weekend. As I have already said my DH bought me the Sony P&S 8MP, I am going to use the above websites and go check it out. Thanks Again, you have ALL been very helpful and I appreciate it.Groucho said:Good grief, don't do THAT!
You need to think about your requirements more specifically than just "good to great photos"... for example, how long of a zoom do you want? Anything longer than 3x usually means an "SLR-style" camera design. How small do you want it to be? How important is shutter lag, or low image noise especially at high ISO, or manual settings? Do you want to be able to take decent-quality movies with it?
I think that you can be happy going from a film SLR to a PnS digital. I don't think you'd be as happy going from a DSLR to a PnS digital. But there are so many out there that you really need to think specifically about what's important to you - once you do that, then it's our job to help you figure out what's hype (megapixels, digital zoom) and what's important (low noise, optical zoom, shutter lag, etc.)