We're all spoiled today. These
days we want the newest fastest and best - but if you're not using
features that make the "best" what it is, then it's possible a better
option (your personal 'best') was not taken.
Looking
at cameras - and by cameras, I'm referring to interchangeable lens
cameras - There's a myriad of options old and new, and quite often we
neglect other choices because of brand ignorance, plain ignorance,
ageism, and a complete misunderstanding of what the hell our needs are.
First
off - buying used cameras will generally give you a better return on
your investment. Camera tech isn't jumping by leaps and bounds normally each generation. Also, old higher end stuff is pretty damn robust still.
Lets say you want a camera with great quality, and can take a brutal amount
of punishment. most start looking at the pro range, and would focus on
the Canon 1DX, or Nikon D4 which are current flagships of the
professional DSLR duopoly. Whoa, now we're at $5k-$6k and no lenses yet - slow down! What's
the purpose? A Pentax K30 can handle crap weather and take a fair
beating, and the Olympus E-5 is a tank that would survive a dunking and
their EM5 is also weather resistant. Now granted, their image quality
chops to compare against a D4 and 1DX would pale, but I'd imagine saving
several thousand dollars is important if the level of image quality
they deliver meets your needs. Even then, older cameras may suffice - e.g. 1Ds III.
Lots
of people want to take pictures of their kids. What they don't
understand is they want the impossible. They'll buy the newest general
consumer level DSLR, not invest time to learn anything or in any lenses and expect to be called a
photographer. I have news for you buddy. http://youarenotaphotographer.com/
There's little point to an Interchangeable lens camera if you don't change from the dinky, dark kit lenses that come standard, and don't take the time to learn even the basics.
If
you're shooting indoors, even F2.8 zooms can be slow. You're going to
want to move to primes (generally) if you need speed. Olympus SLR users
have had some F2.0 zooms available to them (which still won be fast
enough for the weak old 12MP sensor they're stuck with at the moment)
and Sigma just released the a-bomb of lenses, a F1.8 zoom for APS-C. For the most part
though, going with cheap primes can get you better quality photos, cost
less and be lighter. It may require you moving around and adjusting your
position more, but there's a bit of truth to the statement that primes make you think about your composition more.
If
you're indoors, you should be using a flash. $60 can get you a Yongnuo
yn-560 ii manual flash. That's a hell of a lot cheaper than buying a
higher end camera and lenses. Also the bright burst of light is far more
likely to give you a sharp freeze of the kid you're trying to shoot.
Manual flash settings of the Yongnuo means you select the power manually
- but this is a good thing as well. the consistent output leads to the
same brightness of pictures. Bouncing the flash off a wall or ceiling
with give wonderful soft lighting.
So how cheap can we get here? Keh.com has
a Canon T1i (15mp) body for $275. It's not new, but that sensor is
still decent. A Nikon D90 can be had for about $400 and will deliver
better high iso and is also rather sturdy. For lenses, the canon nifty
50 - the 50mm F1.8 can be bought (used) for under $100. That's about as
good as it gets for lens deals. For crop sensors, team it with the 28mm
F1.8 (~$350 used). Add the $60 flash, and you've spent $785, have two
lenses delivering decent quality, better depth of field control than the
F2.8 zoom guys, and much much better low light shots.
Ok, how cheap can we go for a fair indoor studio-ish looking pictures setup? REALLY...
- $110 : used epl1
- $50 : 50mm f1.4 (FD, F, M42 mount - manual focus)
- $20 : adapter for above lens
- $40 : Neewer 560 (Yongnuo ODM?)
- $120 : C22525KP - pentax 25mm f1.4 C mount
- $20 : adapter for the c mount
The
50 becomes an effective 100mm lens in this, setup. The 25mm a 50, and a
poor one - but use it for it's character. Total spent $360. If all you're doing is portraits, you can just with with the 50mm (100mm effective) and that's just $220 for the setup.
Cheap wide lens for Micro fourthirds cameras would be the kit lens (14-42mm) + wide angle adapter (WCON-P01). I had the kit lens, and got a used adapter for $60. It generally sells for $100, but look for used or combo deals. First hit on ebay right now is a kit lens with this wide angle adapter and a macro adapter for $130. Getting this instead of the 25mm lens above would have you spending $330.
While the epl1 sensor is weak, and past ISO800 can lead to noise, it is workable. It responds very well to flash input and can produce gorgeous pictures.
My favorite bargain is the old 5D classic. it's $500-$600 used, built like a tank, and full frame. You will be able to swap out the focusing screen to better use manual focus lenses, and since it's full frame, it will give amazing depth of field. It's usable all the way up to ISO 3200, though it's better to stick to 1600 and under.
I bought a 55mm F1.2 FD lens and replaced the back with an ED Mika brass adapter to let me mount it. Because the mirror will hit the lens on swinging up, I had to grind down the mirror a bit on the 5d. My favorite pics have been taken with this camera. Of note is I get sharper pics with the micro four thirds when I'm shooting wide open, but saving (i.e. fixing) poorly exposed pictures from the 5d is much easier. The sensor just has way more headroom than my EP3.
More to come later - sample pics and doctoring lenses...
Update:
Option 1 : EPL1 + manual 50mm
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