4HOLIDAYS
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Jan 30, 2010
- Messages
- 1,878
My DH surprised me with the T4i I had been wanting! Yah!
I haven't had anything but PnS for 8-10 yrs now. He got it with the 18-135mm STM and the 40mm STM pancake lenses.
1- Filters, we live near the beach, so that is a given situation for me. We do a lot of pics there every year. Friend has recommended B&W UV Haze MRC 010M filter. Thoughts?
2-I had been thinking more of the canon 50 f1.4 vs the 40mm 2.8 he got(he got it for $100 when he bought the camera) Will this be able to do about the same?
3-Any accessories that you wish you had had when you were starting off? Othere than more lenses? Like the bags, cleaning,diffusers...no big purchases.
I have the " Undersanding exposure" and trying to process all that info,but am right now just playing with the new camera trying to learn the settings and menus.
Thanks for sugestions and help.
I haven't had anything but PnS for 8-10 yrs now. He got it with the 18-135mm STM and the 40mm STM pancake lenses.
1- Filters, we live near the beach, so that is a given situation for me. We do a lot of pics there every year. Friend has recommended B&W UV Haze MRC 010M filter. Thoughts?
2-I had been thinking more of the canon 50 f1.4 vs the 40mm 2.8 he got(he got it for $100 when he bought the camera) Will this be able to do about the same?
3-Any accessories that you wish you had had when you were starting off? Othere than more lenses? Like the bags, cleaning,diffusers...no big purchases.
I have the " Undersanding exposure" and trying to process all that info,but am right now just playing with the new camera trying to learn the settings and menus.
Thanks for sugestions and help.
Besides I have a closet full of bags that at the time I thought were the answer to my prayers which soon became obsolete! My recommendation to all new DSLR owners is to slow down and start learning your camera, its bells and whistles, etc. You approach new equipment as problem solvers. I recommend that you start shooting at every opportune moment and learn your style of what you are going to shoot. When your existing equipment is not able to achieve what you want, research what equipment will allow you to do it. The photographer is usually the determining factor of good images, but there is an equipment factor. I speak from personal experience! Example: I shoot a lot of motorsports. As long as our races were day races, I was fine. Unfortunately, International Speedway Corporation decided to install lights and run night races. While my equipment was capable, it was a struggle. To solve the problem, I ended up buying a new camera body with higher usable ISO. Which also coincided with my purchase of the Sigma 30 f1.4 to capture the dark ride images at WDW (my personal obsession). Again, my recommendation is to approach all equipment purchases as problem solving endeavors.