Tuesday 11 July 2017

Which Camera is Best




Which Camera is Best, the one you have with you.

Recently I have been reading lots of reports or reviews about photographers changing camera systems. I am one of those, last October I swapped all my Sony Alpha System for a Nikon D810. I had been a Sony shooter since 2006, when Sony bought Minolta and I bought the A100. What a great wee camera and with all the promises from Sony that a mountain of lenses would follow. I bought a few other Sony DSLR's as the years went on and my requirements increased, eventually finishing with the Alpha 850 and Sony Mirror less A99. The variety of lenses never really increased and this frustrated me. About a year ago I started to get really disappointed in the files/system I was getting and using, I wanted more, more size, more information and more specialist lenses. I spend many hours researching my options, I asked at the camera stores, they had their the brands they promote over the others, so I got all sorts of useless information. After much research and asking myself what I wanted in a camera system, I wrote a list of things it should have and could do, lenses and accessories available, I came to the conclusion it had to be Nikon. After nearly a year of operating the system I am still in love and getting the files that far exceed my expectations.
So if we get back to the question what is the best camera, it is really simple, the one that suits you, feels good and excites you to get it out and play. Most brands are very similar these days, not a lot of difference, I often use a company called, https://www.dxomark.com/ , who test cameras and lenses, combinations and test against other brands.
It does not matter what camera system you use it is the sensibility of the photographer that
matters first.

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