Here is a collection of info I send out to folks when they ask me about buying a camera. Some might be relevant and some not. If this doesn't answer your questions please shoot me an email at sposten@gmail.com and I'll be happy to answer anything I can and point ya in as right a direction as best as I can. Sorry for the length, a lot of it is consolidated from questions people have asked me previously!The bottom line is my stock answer for 99% of the people who ask me what they should buy is "Go to Costco and get either the Nikon or Canon kit they sell there for about $1000 or maybe a bit less. You could also find good deals on similar official "kit" packages at B&H and Amazon. Any place beyond that and you are on your own. Don't buy any kits that aren't officially bundled together by the manufacturer, they are usually made by slimy vendors who are trying to get you to buy a bunch of low quality gear at high prices." That's not very descriptive tho so for those who want more info about why I use what I use, here it is. --- First, people can spend months trying to find the perfect camera or a really great bargain. There is no perfect camera and most bargains aren't. DSLR cameras are expensive and generally they are worth it. You wouldn't cheap out on a power tool, a car or other gear that is functional, just because it's consumer electronics doesn't make it any less important to buy a tool you can trust and that has very real costs. Also, buying the camera is only the first step. To get the most out of a DSLR you need a computer to store the pictures on, memory cards, maybe a printer and software to edit your pictures with. Plus a LOT of learning. With a digicam you just press a button and you are done. The power of a DSLR is in making it do what you want it to rather than it guessing like a point and shoot does. If you use a DSLR like a point and shoot you will waste a $1000 and not be any happier with the pictures you take, and might even feel that the P&S took BETTER pictures... And a number of my friends have bought DSLRs only to find the size and weight very limiting, plus they can't give the camera to a friend or spouse to shoot with very easily. You have to weight all of that and decide if the pros of DSLR really outweigh the cons. I personally can never go back to using a digicam especially cause of what is known as the Shutter lag, that is you press the button and it can take 2-3 seconds for the damn thing to take a picture, but YMMV. Some of the newer digicams have eliminated a lot of that but you still lose ALL of the flexibility of a DSLR. For people new to DSLRs, the most important thing you can read is right here: http://photography-on-the.net/forum/showthread.php?t=414088&highlight=newbie I am heavily biased towards Canon and Nikon for DSLRs. I recently reverted back to Nikon after using the Canon 20D for about 3 years. Sony makes a new excellent set of DSLRs that can take some old Konika/Minolta lenses. Pentax and Olympus make fine DSLRs too I'm sure, just not for me. Sigma and Panasonic are making a DSLR alternative called Micro 4/3rds that sounds really cool but I don't own one, not yet anyway. If I were to buy one it would be the Panasonic GH1 but it still costs $1500 so it's a no go, I can spend that on a tool that works everyday but not for something I would use as a 'toy' to learn with. My main camera is a Nikon D300, it is built like a tank and it is my work horse. It cost $1800 or so when they first came out, is down under $1500 now, and has been officially replaced by the D300s model. It is heavy and is not for everyone. But for me, the weight is not an issue and when I'm ready for a new camera it will be in the D300 family or moving up to its big brother, the D3 or D4 if and when Nikon officially announces that. Those cost ridiculous money so most family/friends would never consider something in that range. I mention this not to flaunt how much I spend but to explain that the cameras that _I_ follow are in a smaller market than the consumer cameras like the D40, D5000 and Canon XTI that they are considering. So my opinion is biased against those in some ways. I DO own a Nikon D5000 which I mostly love but it would never work for me on a daily basis the way it would for most people just getting started. The D5000 for me is the camera I leave in the car so I have a DSLR with me at all times without risking leaving my precious D300 out there. If the D5000 got stolen I would be bummed. BUT if the D300 and my good lenses got swiped I would be devastated. The D5000 has the exact same imaging sensor the D300 has, which is fantastic. It shoots video, is light and has lots of features. But it is not very weather resistant and it's too small for my chubby hands =) Most beginners LOVE the low weight on it too, plus the LCD flips out so you can angle it above and below your eyeline when using live view and video, which is really nice. -The Nikon D300 has incredible ergonomics and features, but it comes at a weight and price cost. The LCD is huge and detailed, the Live View very functional (very helpful for moon shots and macros) the metering is spot on and I find the colors more accurate. It does not shoot video. -It allowed me to use all my old Nikkor lenses -The Nikon 18-200 lens is one of the best performers and best value lenses ever made. It is NOT designed for low light shooting but even in moderate light it is awesome. Canon's 18-200 is supposedly pretty good but not the equal of the Nikon, tho I have never used theirs. Really right now Nikon is eating Canon's lunch in most price categories for the cameras themselves, after having been behind for 10 years. The D300, D3 and D700 are just amazing values and performers. Lens wise it's a toss up. Nikon has the better 18-200, canon has better primes, Nikon has more interesting F2.8 zooms, Canon has L telephotos. Canon has a winner in the full frame arena, the $2500 5D mark 2. This is out of the reach for most beginners. As is the Nikon D700. Most consumer level DSLR cameras are what are known as 'crop' bodies, that is their imaging sensor is 2/3 the size of a 35mm frame. The Full frame D700 and Canon 5D mark 2 use the full extent of a 35mm lens, so an image shot at 24mm looks the same on a film camera. On a crop body, that 24mm has about the same angle of view as a lens 1.6 x as large, so it comes out to about 37mm. This is great on telephoto lenses, so a 200mm lens comes out with a 310mm crop, but on the wide end of things something shot at 18mm has about a 30mm angle of view. So getting 'real' wide shots on these crop cameras can be tough. You learn to work around it but it is something you have to be mindful of. The best advice I can give people is to pick a price range they are willing to spend for the body alone, go to best buy or circuit city and hold the Nikon, Canon and, if they have any, competing brands in your hands and see which one feels right. While I prefer the ergonomics and features of Nikon cameras it really comes down to what one works for you! Then go pick out the best lens you can afford to go with it. The Nikon 18-200 is the best 'value' lens I have ever used but it costs $650. In my opinion it costs that much because it is worth it. And while that is a crazy amount for most people getting started, it's a third the price of the pro lenses I use and want more of =) You CAN get decent lenses for less money but I do not have much experience with them. Tamron, Sigma and Tokina all make SOME lenses that are both excellent and total stinkers. Your best bet for seeing which is which is at this link: http://www.fredmiranda.com/reviews/ Any time my friends or family want to try out any of my cameras or lenses just let me know and I'm happy to let you go play! Some links I recommend for getting started, all of these have their own biases but I trust them for the most part. http://www.scottkelby.com/blog http://www.dpreview.com http://www.bythom.com http://www.imaging-resource.com http://terrywhite.com http://photography-on-the.net/forum/ http://www.fredmiranda.com/forum/ http://nikonrumors.com http://www.canonrumors.com http://thepioneerwoman.com/ http://theonlinephotographer.typepad.com/the_online_photographer/blog_index.html http://www.luminous-landscape.com/ To see everything new in the photographic world in one spot: http://my.alltop.com/ScottKelby The most compelling photographic journalism I've found is here: http://lens.blogs.nytimes.com/ Deal finders: http://www.hardforum.com/forumdisplay.php?f=28 http://forums.slickdeals.net/forumdisplay.php?sduid=0&f=9 http://www.techbargains.com/ Then: http://www.pricegrabber.com to compare prices. http://www.resellerratings.com to see if the guys you are buying from are legit or shady crooks from Brooklyn. Avoid the scammers and Brooklyn Crooks: http://donwiss.com/pictures/brooklynstores/ ***If something looks too good to be true, it probably is! Canon and Nikon gear is expensive mostly because they are worth it!*** If you see info on Nikon stuff by a guy named Ken Rockwell understand that he has some interesting things to say but on a lot of things he's a real idiot, and he often says controversial things just to get a ton of traffic on his page. Take anything he has to say with a grain of salt. http://www.kenrockwell.com Don't forget you are going to need a system for getting your pictures to your computer, editing them, displaying them and printing them! Personally I use adobe lightroom, post my pictures on Flickr, and get prints made at Costco. Costco rocks! Most beginners will be stumped by this whole process. I recommend they start on an Apple iMac and use iPhoto to get going the fastest and with the best results. If you don't have a Mac and don't intend to get one, Photoshop elements may be a good alternative but I don't have any experience there to share with you. Sam / Trey |