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- Name
- Steve
- Edit My Images
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Okay, so let me set the scene. Up until a few months ago I was employed as a sales engineer for a large multi-national company, working just 3 days a week. For the past six years I have also been working as a self-employed portrait and wedding photographer - a weekend warrior if you like - also for 3 days a week. The photography business has been steadily growing and I needed to be able to commit another day a week but my employer (quite understandably) wasn't willing to go along with that so at the end of September I decided to make photography my full-time occupation and resigned from my sales job.
My camera equipment is Nikon and I've been using a couple of D300 bodies with a mixture of DX and FF lenses. The budget I set aside for turning the business from part to full time included replacing the D300's with a couple of FF bodies and, obviously, replacing the DX lenses with FF ones. So I got to thinking about which body I was going to buy and figured that whatever I chose needed to not only have professional features but also to look the part too. Joe Public doesn't know a D800 from a D40 but he "knows" a big camera means great results
I began looking at the new D600. It's within the budget and is the latest FF offering from Nikon so I'd almost convinved myself it was what I needed before I even looked at it. Now I'm not so sure
To my mind, a "professional" level camera should provide just the controls that a photographer needs to get the results he/his clients require using his/her skill and knowledge. Things like "scene modes" which include great swathes of automation reduce or even remove control of the image capture and puts it in the hands of the computer inside the camera. To my way of thinking that makes it little more than a very expensive (albeit very high quality) point and shoot .... or have I got this completely wrong :shrug:
I would be interested to hear your views
My camera equipment is Nikon and I've been using a couple of D300 bodies with a mixture of DX and FF lenses. The budget I set aside for turning the business from part to full time included replacing the D300's with a couple of FF bodies and, obviously, replacing the DX lenses with FF ones. So I got to thinking about which body I was going to buy and figured that whatever I chose needed to not only have professional features but also to look the part too. Joe Public doesn't know a D800 from a D40 but he "knows" a big camera means great results
I began looking at the new D600. It's within the budget and is the latest FF offering from Nikon so I'd almost convinved myself it was what I needed before I even looked at it. Now I'm not so sure
To my mind, a "professional" level camera should provide just the controls that a photographer needs to get the results he/his clients require using his/her skill and knowledge. Things like "scene modes" which include great swathes of automation reduce or even remove control of the image capture and puts it in the hands of the computer inside the camera. To my way of thinking that makes it little more than a very expensive (albeit very high quality) point and shoot .... or have I got this completely wrong :shrug:I would be interested to hear your views