Wednesday, December 4, 2013

Best choice point and shoot ($300-$450)?

best dslr camera for video recording 2012
 on best dslr camera for video recording 2012 on dslr for video
best dslr camera for video recording 2012 image



Rachel Cro


I am looking for a good camera for indoor pictures. I have 3 little kids and take a million shots indoors, but the little $100 camera I have doesn't take decent pictures. I've looked into it a bit and have found a few with good reviews and decent picture quality. The few I've looked into:

Olympus TG-1iHS 12 MP Waterproof Digital Camera with 4x Optical Zoom
Sony Cyber-shot DSC-HX30V 18.2 MP Exmor R CMOS Digital Camera with 20x Optical Zoom and 3.0-inch LCD (Black) (2012 Model)
Nikon COOLPIX P310 16.1 MP CMOS Digital Camera with 4.2x Zoom NIKKOR Glass Lens and Full HD 1080p Video
Nikon COOLPIX L810 16.1 MP Digital Camera with 26x Zoom NIKKOR ED Glass Lens and 3-inch LCD (Red)
Fujifilm XF1/Blk 12MP Digital Camera with 3-Inch LCD (Black)
Olympus XZ-1 10 MP Digital Camera with f1.8 Lens and 3-Inch OLED Monitor (Black)
Canon PowerShot SX260 HS 12.1 MP CMOS Digital Camera with 20x Image Stabilized Zoom 25mm Wide-Angle Lens and 1080p Full-HD Video (Black)
Panasonic DMC-FZ150K 12.1 MP Digital Camera with CMOS Sensor and 24x Optical Zoom (Black)
Nikon COOLPIX P510 16.1 MP CMOS Digital Camera with 42x Zoom NIKKOR ED Glass Lens and GPS Record Location (Black)

I was wondering if anyone had one of these or a decent knowledge of them and could advise me on which would be best for what I'm looking for. Or another suggestion of a camera that takes good indoor pictures. I work a lot in low light and with fast kids. I'm not expecting a miracle - point and shoot cameras can only do so much, but... Any help would be appreciated!



Answer
None of the above.

http://thewirecutter.com/reviews/the-best-compact-camera-for-less-than-450-is-the-panasonic-lx7/

I have the LX3 and I love it. I also have an older and current generation dSLR and a bunch of high quality lenses. If you are mainly shooting the kids indoors, you want to have a fast lens (that relates to aperture, not autofocus) and you want something that is meant for wide to slight zooms, so you don't need the 20x zooms. Also, with most of these cameras, the small sensor size means that chasing megapixels is fool's gold. Plus, how big are you going to print something?

The Panasonic has a great lens, lets you work in lower light than most of the competitors, and takes great photos. It is pretty much the same camera as the D-LUX line which is easily twice as expensive, with a little different case design and some slight changes to the software.

Nikon's D7000 vs Canon's 60D?




Ask


1. Which one is better in terms of photography and in video recording?
2. Give another DSLR, on the same price range that is better or similar to the 2.

Please answer if you've tried either of the two, don't just post answers that you got from the web. I prefer to know your personal experience/s with the cameras above. Thanks!



Answer
Both are fine.

Forced between the two, the Nikon D7000 wins. It uses a superior Sony Exmor image sensor that beats the Canon made one. Even if the Canon had some other edge over the Nikon, I would rather work around it and have a better image sensor.

There are better choices. For heavy video use, the Sony Alphas are better. For mostly photos, the new Pentax bodies use the newer generation of Sony Exmor image sensors. Look for discounts on the Pentax K 30 from 2012. Also, look at the new K 50. If you are really serious, the Pentax K5 II is worth a look as well.




Powered by Yahoo! Answers

No comments:

Post a Comment