D90 to D7000 or higher?
im looking to upgrade from my D90, i was originally thinking of going to a D300 or possibly the D700 but the D7000 is looking even better, though it doesnt seem like much a step up and i dont want to be buying another body again soon. opinions?
btw i started with a D60 moved up to the 90, been shooting for some years now and am looking to be taking it more seriously in the way of fashion/ portraits
btw i started with a D60 moved up to the 90, been shooting for some years now and am looking to be taking it more seriously in the way of fashion/ portraits
0
Comments
14-24 24-70 70-200mm (vr2)
85 and 50 1.4
45 PC and sb910 x2
http://www.danielkimphotography.com
Again if you have aspriation for getting paid for your work, hands down the D700. If you intend to stay as amatuer/hobbyist where getting "the" shot "when" you need it, then the D7000 will serve you just fine.
14-24 24-70 70-200mm (vr2)
85 and 50 1.4
45 PC and sb910 x2
http://www.danielkimphotography.com
Personally I think the D700 doesn't add very much that most people will need in their photography. Unless you shoot 8 hours a day, every day, the ergonomics are just fine, and so are the buttons. (and if you do shoot 8 hours a day, maybe consider a D3).
Ive never accidentally moved any dial (for one, Nikon listened to complaints and made the mode dial harder to move). D7000 is lighter, and had much longer battery life than the D700. Oh, and it costs less than half. I only see positives (well, maybe the D700 finder is nicer).
http://uwimages.smugmug.com
A friend of mine has a D7000. Brilliant value for money. Very good feel and performance.
You are the only one that can determine which is better for you. Personally the buttons and menu's on the Canon are funky to me. I am sure that I could get used to them, but I have been shooting Nikon for better than 20 years.
The D300 is a nice camera and D700 is also quite nice. I have not seen a D7000 so I cannot comment on those. I use a D3 and it is by far the best that I have ever owned.
I have shot with a number of Canon cameras and they certainly have some things that I wish Nikon would incorporate. From my very limited use, they appear to have a better range of color. The cameras that I borrowed do not compare when it comes to ISO.
I also shoot exclusively in 5:4 mode which is offered in the D3 series. It also allows me to switch to DX mode for macro when I want.
At this point, I am so heavily invested in glass that I could never switch (without a major sponsorship).
Website
...if video is very important to you then, yes. You should also consider the 60D then.
Elaborate? from what i can tell Canon is leading in the Video area but is it enough that it would warrant a full switch over?
Check out the full review & videos of the D7000 at cameralabs.com then you decide the importance of video. The D7000 and 60D are both fine cameras.
"Moving onto the movie mode, Nikon's completely revamped what was available on the D90, which lest we forget was the model which kick-started video on DSLRs two years earlier. The D7000 represents an upgrade in almost every respect: you can now shoot in 1080p (albeit only at 24fps), the maximum recording time in HD is four times longer at 20 minutes (and with a top rate of 150 Megabytes per minute you'll actually achieve that time before the 4GB file limit too), there's manual control over exposures (although you'll need to fix your aperture before entering Live View), and the microphone input has the potential to greatly improve your audio quality.
For all those new features though, the one that's gathered most attention is the continuous AF capability while filming. While this proved reasonably effective at tracking subjects approaching or receding fairly predictably, it was less successful when used erratically like a typical camcorder. Like the D3100 before it, the D7000's Full-time Servo AF mode searches very audibly and visibly every few seconds while filming, which can prove very distracting. The trouble is traditional DSLRs and their lenses just aren't designed for quick and discreet focusing while filming video, and once the initial novelty of full-time AF has worn off, you'll almost certainly switch the D7000 to manual focus.
This eliminates the D7000's key advantage over the EOS 60D when it comes to movies. The Canon offers a fully articulated screen, a choice of frame rates at 1080p, greater manual control during composition, audio level meters and higher bit rates (albeit limiting the maximum HD recording time to 12 minutes per clip). The bottom line is while the D7000 offers considerably better movie capabilities than its predecessor, there's few high-end enthusiasts or professionals who'd choose it over one of Canon's bodies for video alone. And for consumers, Sony's hybrid models like the SLT-A33 deliver far superior continuous autofocusing capabilities."
http://behret.smugmug.com/ NANPA member
How many photographers does it take to change a light bulb? 50. One to change the bulb, and forty-nine to say, "I could have done that better!"
a comparison of the Canon 60D and Nikon D7000 -
http://www.popphoto.com/reviews/cameras/2011/01/tested-canon-60d
More research here D7000 sensor ranks very high
http://dxomark.com/index.php/Camera-Sensor/Sensor-rankings.
If you already have the investment in glass I dont see what you would gain by switching brands. Both would take awesome shots.
http://kadvantage.smugmug.com/