What is your shooting style, and how did it influence your choice of camera?
OK, I took my camera out yesterday to the local country park. It was my 1st time using it so I was really playing around with the settings to try and understand how things worked. I did take this tough. I was using my Sigma 28-300mm f3.5-6.3 lens, plus I cropped the image a bit.
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So what would you recommend for first time buyers today in terms of camera capabilities and shooting style? You do see many thinking they'll "grow with" their cameras. This is probably true of many. But, IYO, are some buying "more camera" than they need, and is it really necessary? From the numerous threads I've seen lately for first time buyers, this information could be helpful to many.It's over kill
So what would you recommend for first time buyers today in terms of camera capabilities and shooting style? You do see many thinking they'll "grow with" their cameras. This is probably true of many. But, IYO, are some buying "more camera" than they need, and is it really necessary? From the numerous threads I've seen lately for first time buyers, this information could be helpful to many.
As for myself, I knew I wanted something fairly simple to use (as simple as a dSLR could be). I knew I wanted to grow with it, but that the process was going to be fairly painful for meand that I wanted to master the camera in a reasonable amount of time. I figured that for the near future anyway, I'd be shooting strictly as a hobbyist. I also noticed that many seem to upgrade their cameras in a short amount of time, maybe two to three years, so this made me curious as well.
Thoughts?
My choices at the time were the Canon 400 (rebel Xti in the US), Canon 30D or Canon 5d. Going down the Nikon route the choices were the Nikon D40, D80 or D200.
Once in the shop and fiddling I immediately ruled out the 400d - it felt too small and wrong in my hands. I also ruled out the 5D - it was too much camera for me at that time. That left me with the 30d and the Nikons to look at. I couldnt take to the Nikons, they didnt sit right with me and although I would readily agree i would get great pictures from them, I preferred the feel of the 30d, which was the camera I bought. At the time, many of its features were mysterious to me and probably the sensible choice was the 400d, BUT I grew into the 30D very very quickly and it turned out to be the perfect one for me.
That is a perfect example of how to go about buying a camera.
Originally Posted by handicap18![]()
I'm not completely sure of Canon's termonology, but I believe there are 3 options with the XT: One Shot, AI Focus & AI Servo. Servo is used to track a subject as it moves around the frame, or toward and away from the camera. AI Focus will choose which of the 7 points to focus on based on subject distance. One Shot allows you to move between the 7 focus points and you can choose which one the lens will focus on. I believe it is found in the menu under camera 1 then AF mode. In One Shot you use the 4 buttons on the back to move between the 7 focus points in the view finder.
If I'm wrong, please correct me. I'm just going by pictures and reviews on one of the review web sites.
Thanks for the explanation. I have seen those settings on the menu before but never looked them up to see what they meant. I start an intro to photography class tomorrow night so hopefully I'll be able to ask some questions there as well. Thanks for getting me pointed in the right direction
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This is less of an issue today than it was even a year or two ago.Allie5 said:For those that specifically ask about a DSLR, personally, I usually tend to steer them towards Canon or Nikon - that isnt because Sony, Pentax, Olympus dont make great cameras, they certainly DO, but the sliding scale of upgradeability with Canon or Nikon seesm to flow better and be an easier process.
Okay, maybe a dumb question. My D40 arrived the other day and I have had a ton of fun playing, however, I am seeing one thing in the viewfinder and I just don't know what it is.
In the little brackets on the right side that tell you how many exposures you have left, when I press the shutter release half way "R 11" shows up. What is that??
That has to do with the buffer. If you have the shutter release set to continuous shot then you can hold the shutter release down and the camera will keep taking a picture. The R 11 says you have 11 images left before the buffer is filled. It takes a bit of time to write to the card.
If you switch to RAW, that will change to something like R 4. RAW images are larger and take longer to write to the card.
That has to do with the buffer. If you have the shutter release set to continuous shot then you can hold the shutter release down and the camera will keep taking a picture. The R 11 says you have 11 images left before the buffer is filled. It takes a bit of time to write to the card.
If you switch to RAW, that will change to something like R 4. RAW images are larger and take longer to write to the card.
(Thought I'd post these from time to time. People new to the thread, please post yours anytime.)
When you first got your dSLR, how did you go about learning to use it?
Include any tools that you used. Did you just wing it? How many of you read your manuals before shooting? Books/DVDs you found helpful? Did you take a class or have someone help you? Let us know!