I am very much an amateur photographer but looking for a camera a step up from the point and shoots. Just wondering if anyone has an opinion on the Samsung NX300.! I saw an ad for it and it looks intriguing...
TIA
Thank you both for such thoughtful replies. I think my biggest desire is control over my settings and focus so that I can manipulate the picture. I am intrigued by "different" kinds of shots--the ones that aren't the obvious ones like having one element stand out while all else is slightly blurry. Those kind of shots.
The ads made the Samsung appeall to a buyer who wants a camera that's not bulky or expensive. Guess they got me intrigued...
Thank you both for such thoughtful replies. I think my biggest desire is control over my settings and focus so that I can manipulate the picture. I am intrigued by "different" kinds of shots--the ones that aren't the obvious ones like having one element stand out while all else is slightly blurry. Those kind of shots.
Sensor size does not come into play as much as people like to think. When distance to subject, focal length and aperture are all equal sensor size is not an issue at all with depth of field. The problem is those factors are rarely equal because people move to frame the same shot or change the focal length, and that changes the math, so that depth of field appears shallower with larger sensors. So I wouldn't stress to much about sensor size. If you learn how to control depth of field you'll be able to do it with any format.
Let's see you do a portrait with a really shallow depth of field with a smart phone camera
Thing is--- with small sensors, you almost never get a large real focal length. Or if you actually do use a large focal length, your equivalent focal length becomes much too long for the shot you were trying to get.
Larger sensors require larger real focal length lenses, which is why you get shallower depth of field.
Take a portrait with your full frame camera, at a focal length of 85mm, medium aperture of 5.6, 6 feet away, and you will get a pretty narrow depth field - about 6 inches.
Take your P&S, stand 6 feet away, use the 5.6 aperture -- and keep the exact same composition, meaning the *equivalent* of 85mm... The real focal length is only 15mm. So the exact same composition, the exact same aperture, the exact same *equivalent* focal length, and get a pretty large depth of field.. instead of 6 inches, it's about 3 feet.
On that typical P&S... A real 85mm, is the equivalent of over 400mm... From 6 feet away, that would mean you are zoomed in on an eye lash in order to get narrow depth of field.
You're using "equivalents" and trying to keep framing the same to justify the shift. Use the ACUTAL numbers and depth of field is the same. It's all about perception anyway.
But that's my point... You CANT use the same actual numbers. On full frame, I often use 200mm for very narrow depth if field. I don't think there exists a small sensor p&s camera on earth that has a real 200mm lens.
Superzoom point and shoots do.
For example, the Sony HX400 has a real 4.3mm-215mm lens, but most know it as a "50x" 25-1250mm equivilent. I guess that's why birders get pleasant pictures of birds with nice, fuzzy backgrounds.
But that's my point... You CANT use the same actual numbers. On full frame, I often use 200mm for very narrow depth if field. I don't think there exists a small sensor p&s camera on earth that has a real 200mm lens.