MistyGirl said:
Hi again and thanks for your replies, I'm very confused as I don't know too much about the DSLRs, I was hoping to buy one then do some sort of course plus some messing about myself (trial and error). Maybe I should stick to the Nikon Coolpix that I have??
My use of any camera is for family snaps (parties, holidays and special occasions), some landscape (I live in the West of Ireland and I just love to take pictures of the sea and the hills, also we have the Burren nearby), taking photos of my kids participating in their various club games and athletics.
The bottom line is I can afford to spend around $1,600 but I don't want to get something that I will never be able to use or worse I get something that I'll be disappointed in if I get the bug for DSLR Photography.
Yeah...
The Nikon D50 has superior performance to the D70 in high ISO. And the Nikon feels built better then the Canon. But as TJL1388 said.....
Tjl1388 said:
.... I am sorry to say I probably should have went with the canons from the begining ....
Say... I just noticed you're from or located in
Ireland! My neighbors of 2 years were from Ireland!

They were expats here for an Irish company - the Dad was an exec here to "watch the money" coming an' goin' for the home office.
At any rate, I would recommend the 350XT.... because the D50 is a 6MP camera - and although if may FEEL BETTER ... the picture resolution size on the Canon is 33% larger at 8MP AND... read the reviews at DP review and you'll see their detailed comparison with side by side images between the D50 and 350 ... left the D50 behind. The price difference is just $100 or less after rebate (is the rebate good in Ireland?). AND wouldn't you prefer the camera with the superior resolution, AND better image purity?
IE.... between the 2 the high ISO may be similar but the 350XT is 33% higher resolution. Meaning you could cut away 25% of a 350 image ... and you would STILL have a marginally better image. That's before you consider the dominance Canon enjoies with professionals ... like for sports and such it's obvious with all those white barreled lenses. I'm going to a "fun and crazy" convention tomorrow (Anime Expo in Anaheim - largest in North America - 2 photos below) with my friend who shoots professional football exclusively out of Los Angeles and he amusingly speaks of how nearly every pro shoots with Canon equipment. He'd simply quip - canon makes better bodies and glass.
Period. DO you really need a detailed explanation beyond that? Well - at the
consumer and
"pro-sumer" level - there are other considerations:
Now - as everyone has said... the size and feel are gonna be different. The 350 is smaller and the 2nd lightest DSLR on the market. Thats both positive and negative. Carrying a 350 will be obviously more comfortable (+). BUT advantage in the handling "feel", fit in you hands, and even the "look"
might go to Nikon. Yeah, I don't like the mode dial on the 350 one bit either. And your hand size and may dictate one over the other. But the whole purpose is taking pictures, right? - and between the 350 and D50 there is a clear resolution difference. A 6MP DSLR is one step closer to the technological grave than an 8MP (in thoery). AND that statement is coming from ME - and I use a 6MP DSLR... the Canon 10D.
BUT I suspect you'd be happier
handling the Nikon D50. AND the opposite is gonna be true with the images - that you will be happier with the
350 images versus the D50. So you want better pictures or a camera that feels a little better to handle?
So, as advice to you - if it were me and I were choosing between the Canon 350 versus a Nikon D50.... I'd go with the 350. And apply the left over budget towards a couple of nice accessories. I would get the 18-55 KIT lens because it is the cheapest near wide angle lense out there... and although it is derrided by some because it is inexpensive - it is also a tremendous "bang for the buck" value. And if you're considering a $1600 budget.... I would tack on a 1 gig flash card for about $50-75. AND the kicker... I would go for the 70-300 f4-5.6 IS zoom! It is an awesome lense. OR... I would go for the 70-200 f4 "L" lense. Both of these are about $550 or so brand new. The "L" is very slightly better for image quality - and is built like a tank as it is considered a true "professional" lense. But the 70-300 IS is image stabilized (IS - is 3rd generation with a 2 mode option!). Plus the 70-300 reaches 100mm further. Which on a DSLR is another 160mm due to the crop factor. I suspect you might have a little money left over for a half decent bag.
Now as an alternative... if you want an extrenal flash - then I would recommend a 28-135 IS ... ( I just bought it and am waiting for mine to arrive! ) or a 28-105 f3.5-4.5. These two should run $400 or $210. SO the 3 lenses I am talking about are either $550/ $400/ or $210. MAKE CERTAIN NOT to get the
75-300 IS... that is the older design and is lower rated for performance. Also - do NOT get the 28-105
f4-5.6... this is very low rated. Both of these lenses sell for $100 less than the models I am recommending. A dishonest sales-person might pull a quick switch on you if you are not careful. ANd... as for a flash - just get a 430EX is about $250.
So - if you got a 350 kit ... that might be $774 (price at B&H) or $674 after the $100 rebate (expires on July 15! and it may or may not be good in Ireland - get family or a friend in the US to get it for you!). ADD the 70-300IS f4-5.6 or 70-200 f4 L for $550 and your total is $1224. Add a bag, spare battery, good 2 protective UV filters (don't go with the green label hoya UV filters ... get black or grey labeled ones - see ebay ).... and you're probably at $1324~$1375. You can now add a fair tripod or monopod for $40-75... so lets just say $50. Now your total is at $1375-1425. Now spend the rest on a softare suite or apply it towards printing huge enlargements of a few of your first few prized images! For laughs = we have a place called Costco in the USA that will make a 12x18 for $2.99. Yeah, 3 bucks. It can have jacked up colors - but for $3 it makes a fun give away - or something to play with as a temporary mini-poster.
If you can fit it in - get non- canon batteries (save a ton on $), and get a nice bag... I like Lowepros. Oh yeah... add $40 for the Canon hood on the 70-300 IS too.
If you don't want the long Canon 70-300 or 70-200 L... then the 28-135 IS savings will give you a running total of 1226-1275. Now you have enough saved to get a 430EX flash for $250. Your total is back up to 1475-1525. But the 430EX has a powerful guide number of 141 (IE - it is rated to shoot 141' at ISO 100 with a 105mm lens setting). Thats far more powerful than the pop up camera flash. And he 430 can use E-TTL for the flash exposure! But - how often will you need a flash that powerful?
And if this costs more in Ireland - drop the flash - or get the 28-105 f3.5-4.5 with a flash. AND... finally.... as kelly said - a 30D would be an awesome DSLR to have. But it costs a whole lot more. You would not have any budget for a 2nd lens or flash. But you owuld have a very very durable camera that would (in thoery) be tough to outgrow. The shutter life on a 350XT is rated at supposedly 40-50,000 actuations, while the 30D is rated by Canon at 100,000 (mean time between failure). Either way - that is the equivulant of 1400 - 2900 or more rolls of 36 exposure 35mm film.
So - my silly excessive detail is a demonstartion that I do in fact "give a damn". LOL!

Right or wrong.
