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When should you switch to a dSLR camera?

May 13, 2010 by admin No Comments »

Nowadays, the small flat compact cameras that most people buy are brilliant so whybother to switch to a heavy, expensive and complicated Single Lens Reflex camera?

Ultimately switch when you are no longer happy with the quality of shots you produce in your little camera.You can take better shots with a dSLR for many reasons.

Firstly, in cameras, size matters. All digital cameras have a sensor in the back but not all sensors are the same. Even if a compact camera’s sensor has 10 megapixels, the chances are that the sensor size will be around five times smaller than a 10 megapixel digital SLR. You simply get  sharper images with better colour fidelity and less ‘noise’ from a larger sensor.

Secondly you have far more control over the shots with a digital SLR. Small automatic cameras have to make choices about exposure, aperture and other aspects that are artisitic choices. The automatic software is great for snaps, but if you want to creatively decide on the mood of a photo it is easiest to control aperture, exposure and so on manually.

You can swap lenses. There are hardly any compact cameras with interchangeable lenses. Switching from a telephoto to a macro radically changes the type of shot you can achieve. Yes, your compact camera has a macro function and a ‘10x optical zoom’ sticker on the side, but the inbuilt lens just cannot compete with a good set of lenses. High Quality changeable lenses are really very much better than ‘all purpose lenses’

You can shoot in the RAW which is nothing to do with going out in your birthday suit but everything to do with an absolutely brilliant feature of digital SLR cameras.  As the name implies, RAW files are the raw data recorded by the sensor.  Jpegs by contrast have already been processed by the camera before saving. However there are many ways of processing a shot and all of them mean the camera has to ditch data, compress files, muck around with colours and generally monkey about with the scene. If you save a file in RAW format you have the luxury of making all the key decisions at your leisure whilst sitting in front of your computer. Only once you are happy with brightness and colour cast do you ‘process’ the image into a jpg file for printing or uploading to the web.

The first time I saw what shooting in RAW format allowed me to achieve I was dumbfounded. I promised myself two things. Firstly never to shoot pictures in JPEG again and secondly to tell everyone I could about just how fantastically happy I am that I switched from a compact digital camera to a digital SLR. So, that is why I wrote this article.

 

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