Digital Cameras Discussions |
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Roger
Joined: Mar 1, 2005
Points: 355
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Re: Digital vs. Film SLRs
Reply #3 Mar 17, 2005 12:16 pm |
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Since digital cameras range from a couple of hundred dollars to Canon's $7999.00 EOS-1Ds Mark II, the factor for going digital should not be price. Are you on your computor every day? Will you use your printer for something every 3 days so it does not dry out? Do you or family need hard copies photos to show others? ( in real life-husbands are slow to get the digital photos printed out in a timely manner ) how many photos do you shoot now? 3 rolls per year? 5? 12? 1? 40? The digital camera you but now is "locked" into March 2005 technology, but a 20 year old film camera benifits from new film technology. Make the jump to digital when your ready, but don't flinch at the time it takes OR the cost of camera,paper,memory,ink,printer,cables, and software. 18 degrees Thanks 18 degrees! I am on my computer several times a day. I print about every day, but at the moment I dont have a printer especially made for digital photos. Could you recomend a good one? I would like to be able to print out photos and frame them. I probably shoot about 12 to 20 rolls a year. Manly on my annual trips. Last year I did an around the world trip and shot like 10 rolls in two weeks! Roger
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18Degrees
Joined: Jan 19, 2005
Points: 111
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Re: Digital vs. Film SLRs
Reply #4 Mar 18, 2005 5:51 pm |
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This is just out from Canon. High-performance digital SLR with 8.0 Megapixel CMOS Sensor and DIGIC II Image Processor. Fast 3 frames-per-second shooting with a 14 frame burst and 0.2 second startup time I'm still waiting for the prices to come down (something like the Canon 20D, but with a full frame 35mm sensor) before i make the jump. But when i do all my Canon fashes and lens and remote will fit the Canon I buy. Canon and Nikon (like Ford vs Chevy- Coke vs Pepsi - PC vs Mac - prunes vs enema ) have been pushing each other to make better cameras, that is good for us. I have a 6 ink tank canon print but no digital yet. I would sugest getting the camera first then the printer, learning what you do not like on about your printer first. Important=get a fast memory card-or it slows down the camera. The prices on these are falling too. 18 degrees
This message was modified Mar 18, 2005 by 18Degrees
18 Degree driveway - 928 Honda track drive - Fertilizer spreader for dispensing salt
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18Degrees
Joined: Jan 19, 2005
Points: 111
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Re: Digital vs. Film SLRs
Reply #6 Mar 20, 2005 12:01 am |
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I have a Elan 7e with Eye Control Canon 28-135 Image Stablizer lens dead Sigma 28-200 lens (it quit autofocusing) 2 550ex flashes (for wireless falsh) bogen tripod stroboframe PRO-T Nikon has the D70 ($999.95 body only, $1299.95 for the kit) but if you wait for septemberish i sure nikon will answer Canon for the christmas season( I usally see new cameras released then). 18 degrees
This message was modified Mar 20, 2005 by 18Degrees
18 Degree driveway - 928 Honda track drive - Fertilizer spreader for dispensing salt
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18Degrees
Joined: Jan 19, 2005
Points: 111
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Re: Digital vs. Film SLRs
Reply #10 Apr 9, 2005 2:01 pm |
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As far as digital slr are concerned to me they make no sense if you already have a film slr. The point of getting a digital is so that you wouldn't have to change lenses and carry all that extra equipment around.
There is a reason the eqipment is the size it is. Smaller cameras (film of digital) do not have the response time or the features to work the shot as fast or at all. BUT, if your camera is to big to luggg around, then the smaller one is the far batter chioce. ( I get frustrated with point and shoot cameras (film or digital), if I am doing more than point & shoot) my $0.02 18 degrees
This message was modified Apr 9, 2005 by 18Degrees
18 Degree driveway - 928 Honda track drive - Fertilizer spreader for dispensing salt
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Muskokaphotog
Joined: Jan 8, 2009
Points: 10
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Re: Digital vs. Film SLRs
Reply #12 Jan 8, 2009 12:38 pm |
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Hi Roger,
I guess that depends on how much you spend on the film, the processing and the camera. And how long you keep your digital camera. Purchasing and processing transparency film today is expensive, total about $30 - 40 per roll, so ten rolls would buy an intro digital.
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