I love my camera a casio exilim its a point and shoot but i have to say that reading this board i get the feeling that if you dont have a DSLR then you are really a novice. like i said i love my camera but its just how it feels on this board
While there are certain shots that a DSLR will do better at, they tend to be at the extremes. Low-light and fast action, for instance. IMO, the key is knowing what you want to do and ensuring that you have the equipment to do it.
...a Canon....The best camera is...
most DSLR users also carry a p&s about everywhere they go.
I keep mine right in my pocket where my money use to be.
![]()
So very true words......The best camera is the one that you are most comfortable with, that you'll actually carry and use, and that you understand.
So very true words.![]()
P&S'er here.
I've "moved up" from a point and shoot (which I was very happy with for many years) to a "bridge" camera, and I do have my eye on a DSLR...
There is absolutely nothing wrong with a P&S camera if it is providing you with what you need in your camera, then it is perfect. Lots and Lots of people would have no need or desire for a SLR camera.
In the end, it is the pictures that matter, not the equipment used to take them. And I would be willing to bet that the vast majority of the people frequenting this board use a P&S camera, it is just a few of us that own dSLR's that like to talk about them....
There's definitely nothing wrong with a point & shoot. I'm of the opinion that in most cases, a good photographer will often take a more pleasing picture with a P&S than a novice will with a DSLR. And in many cases, a DSLR is either inconvenient, unwarranted or just plain not allowed, making the P&S the superior choice.
While there are certain shots that a DSLR will do better at, they tend to be at the extremes. Low-light and fast action, for instance. IMO, the key is knowing what you want to do and ensuring that you have the equipment to do it.
The great thing about digital cameras is that there is a diversity of models so that each of us can choose the camera that best suits our needs. And, as others have said, it's not the camera that makes good pictures, it is the person using the camera that does so. There are plenty of examples on these boards and elsewhere that prove that a good eye combined with a good quality PnS can produce *outstanding* photographs (as opposed to "snapshots"). Give me a good photographer with a good PnS over a mediocre photographer with a $$$$ dSLR anytime.