One thing not mentioned here that should be is another difference between consumer level and good DSLR's. In the point and shoots the post is done
inside the camera. With a DSLR you shoot in RAW mode, meaning you can actually change setting like exposure and other after the fact and the
sharpening is done at that time also. vignetting can be removed easily as can most noise or the rare aberrations.
Unfortunately uploading to ATS destroys quality but here are a couple of examples. These I took with a D200 testing it and a Nikkor 70-300mm VR Lens
right after they first came out. Most testing labs could not say enough good about this camera and the sensors are two generations ahead of this now.
I saw a like new, used one the other day for $400, it sold new for $1,799.00.
These were shot from the back of a stake-bed truck at the SanDiego Wild Animal Park.
I'll post the whole shot reduced in size and then a small crop at full resolution from two photo's of Giraffe. The first from about twenty feet and
the second from about ten feet with the VR lens, handheld.
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/0a53550e1550.jpg[/atsimg]
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/54aa0c7f199b.jpg[/atsimg]
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/9f0cf898815d.jpg[/atsimg]
[atsimg]http://files.abovetopsecret.com/images/member/7ff990474837.jpg[/atsimg]
Unfortunately the lossy compression hides how beautiful of a job this camera does. In full quality the detail is stunning for a handheld shot taken
while standing on a flatbed with other people moving around.
As you can see this fellows opinion of me is being expressed in the first shot
In the second he decides well maybe this guy has some food in his
back pocket.
On the same tour our truck got stuck and we were surrounded by some kind of wild cattle from Africa that were so dangerous they had to send a second
truck that started literally hitting them to protect us while we got unstuck. It was quite wild. While we waited they surrounded us and started
charging towards the truck with only some lumber protecting us. I did not know that such aggressive Cattle even existed, I'm used to the Cattle I grew
up with. Oddly enough the Rhino's were very timid and friendly. Odd how we get wrong idea's about animals.
Yes, I'm rambling and bored
I've confused you enough. Sorry I don't have any files here at my house from newer models, but this should show you
that even an older high end DSLR can be a good choice.
As to film, not anymore. I have a closet full of old Nikon Pro-Level Bodies and since the new sensors are finally the equivalent of what you can scan
from negatives, I'd say go digital. If you go film, you'll also need to lay out money for photo scanner. I use a high end epson for that in that case
Epson is better than Nikon as far as scanners go.
edit on 1/21/2011 by Blaine91555 because: (no reason given)
edit on 1/21/2011
by Blaine91555 because: Stupidity