sabbath999
No longer a newbie, moving up!
- Joined
- Apr 11, 2007
- Messages
- 2,701
- Reaction score
- 71
- Location
- Missouri
- Can others edit my Photos
- Photos OK to edit
I gotta be honest, a whole lot of the differences between all of this stuff is just blah blah blah marketing crap, and it's only important to people who don't actually take pictures.
I mean no disrespect to anybody here, but most photographers aren't good enough to make the difference between a D5000 and a D5500 relevant when viewing an image. Most photographers are not good enough to make any difference apparent between a D7000 and a D300 when looking at an image coming out of the camera.
LENSES? Yes, those make a HUGE difference. Digital bodies? Not so much.
I can shoot with my D300 and get the exact same results as when I shoot my D4... it's just the D4 is a lot better at tracking sports in low-light situations. Are you going to be tracking sports a lot in low light situations? If not, then you will do just fine with a D300. Me? I shoot roller derby in really, really dark (i.e. hard to focus) venues, so it makes a difference.
I always advise people to buy the CHEAPEST camera you can get away with. Weather seals and stuff like that are nice, but I for one don't stand out in the freaking rain taking pictures. If you really need the protection, buy a nice SLR weather cover and use it on all your cameras over the next 20 years.
If you plan on shooting sports, then you need more camera than if you are not. If you are planning on shooting portraits or landscape, you need less.
You ALWAYS need the best glass you can afford.
Don't get caught up in tearing out your soul over which camera you are going to buy... it's going to be a paper weight in 5 years anyway... tear out your soul in deciding which LENSES you are going to buy.
I'm using glass I bought in high school 35 years ago. OK, to be fair I am also using the F2 I bought back then too, but unlike digital, that makes sense.
I mean no disrespect to anybody here, but most photographers aren't good enough to make the difference between a D5000 and a D5500 relevant when viewing an image. Most photographers are not good enough to make any difference apparent between a D7000 and a D300 when looking at an image coming out of the camera.
LENSES? Yes, those make a HUGE difference. Digital bodies? Not so much.
I can shoot with my D300 and get the exact same results as when I shoot my D4... it's just the D4 is a lot better at tracking sports in low-light situations. Are you going to be tracking sports a lot in low light situations? If not, then you will do just fine with a D300. Me? I shoot roller derby in really, really dark (i.e. hard to focus) venues, so it makes a difference.
I always advise people to buy the CHEAPEST camera you can get away with. Weather seals and stuff like that are nice, but I for one don't stand out in the freaking rain taking pictures. If you really need the protection, buy a nice SLR weather cover and use it on all your cameras over the next 20 years.
If you plan on shooting sports, then you need more camera than if you are not. If you are planning on shooting portraits or landscape, you need less.
You ALWAYS need the best glass you can afford.
Don't get caught up in tearing out your soul over which camera you are going to buy... it's going to be a paper weight in 5 years anyway... tear out your soul in deciding which LENSES you are going to buy.
I'm using glass I bought in high school 35 years ago. OK, to be fair I am also using the F2 I bought back then too, but unlike digital, that makes sense.