Photography - a creative art, an essential tool for some, and a hobby for many others. Today we have reached a stage where everyone should have a camera.
Photography began with film cameras and they were always so difficult to operate equipment and to legal thinking for many reasons. They were preserved difficult to maintain and operate. You had to understand really photography, make good photos. For the rest, who wanted a camera, like a program that keepMemories as prints, there was the simple hand-cameras of its time. These were compact and they were certainly cheap, and they made photography much easier, but not completely foolproof. There were problems with which both SLR and point-and-shoot users. Film was developed a costly exercise and lots of photos were lost due to errors during the filming - it was a time before digital sensors, or in the preview LCD screens.
Digital cameras gained significantAcceptance very quickly. They put many of the problems associated with cameras - the immediate ability to view your shot, especially, but they did so at a price. Even the very early digital cameras that lacked the finesse and automation that we see today were much more expensive than decent film SLR cameras available at that time that, overall, be quite large to be equally cameras for professionals and amateurs. As we saw in the past with any new technology, users shouldperhaps delaying purchase of these expensive devices, but the inclusion of digital cameras was fast, and the market has continued to grow since.
It is years since point-and-shoots (P & S) have been developed, and have been the pace of developments and improvements, is enormous. Within a decade we have gone from cameras that could guarantee a correct set of photos in a film to digital point-and-shoots can detect save the faces,they click on photos when people smile and there is little cost in dealing with them!
What more could you want? There are those who point look-and-shoots, and they seem to be regarded as toys and the only right cameras to digital SLRs. Speaking practically, point-and-shoots are actually quite decent. Prosumer point-and-shoot cameras like the Sony DSC-H5 and the Canon SX 10 IS, and many more, have the Canon PowerShot S5 the gap between standard point-and-shoots and closedSLR cameras. Easy to use and the ability to take photos to tele-macro-shots on a single camera without the need for changing any lens or settings. For an effortless photographs prosumer cameras are very good.
However, if you are serious about photography and are analytic on quality and perfection, we will be and other enthusiasts that you purchase a DSLR camera should be told. If you are a professional photographer with a P & S camera, then we have honestly not surewhy ....
SLRs bring a lot to the table, and there are good reasons for their weight, size and the number of buttons and settings that they wear. Do not just go and buy a DSLR and a walk with him in the pocket. They require a rather than approach. They are for those who sit for a whole weekend I go to a kindergarten photographing flowers, and some wild life meant photography, sports photography and will take this kind of dedicated time to try out the cameraall kinds of shots. SLRs are modular gadgets. Thus, over time you will be in the purchase of an additional lens or be drawn two. The type you buy and how much you spend, of course, depend on your requirements. We take a look at two such cameras.
0 ความคิดเห็น:
แสดงความคิดเห็น