Super newbie saying hi and asking at the same time
Hi guys
Just got this site's link from cgtalk, and I must say, this is amazing :lust
I started my own photography just after I finished my college course.
At college, we used an SLR film camera as well as a DSLR. However, I have a Sony DSC H5 which isn't a DSLR, do you think I can achieve a proffesional photography? (I worned ya, its a super newbie question :andy), in other words, does the equipment matter? if so, can Sony DSC H5 be used as a pro tool?
cheers guys
Just got this site's link from cgtalk, and I must say, this is amazing :lust
I started my own photography just after I finished my college course.
At college, we used an SLR film camera as well as a DSLR. However, I have a Sony DSC H5 which isn't a DSLR, do you think I can achieve a proffesional photography? (I worned ya, its a super newbie question :andy), in other words, does the equipment matter? if so, can Sony DSC H5 be used as a pro tool?
cheers guys
0
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Gallery of mine...caution, it's under CONSTANT construction! | Photo Journal
In the right light, at the right time, everything is extraordinary. ~Aaron Rose
Finally H5 owner here welcome i also use H5
About your question i think it depends on what your client needs
i dont thnk h5 can work as full time pro cam
My Gallery
Fred.
http://esiggins.smugmug.com
JenW: thanks, one of our lecture showed us some of his great images shot by 'one-time use' cameras.
Awais Yaqub: hehe, glad I'm not the only one who shoots with H5
ESiggins: thanks m8, I was actually playing with my camera today and discovered even further functions that I didn't know :toni:D
The greatest mistake I ever did was I bought the camera in a package (512MB memory stick, carry bag and the camera) for £400, when I could've added just another £60 and got a Nikon D50 with a basic lense :cry
Thanks again guys
However, if you want to expand your abilities, you really have to save up for a DSLR. I used to use my Sony F828, which works wonders, however, due to the small sensor, I was limited to using ISO speeds of 64-200 only. It was harder to take low light photos handheld without a flash unit, however I was still able to make great images (I took home the Dgrin challenge for 'Long Exposure' a few months back with it). So you cant use the camera as an excuse for bad portraits. The camera is just as good as the person using it!
I say, just keep shooting more and more, save up some money while doing it and expand yourself and your equipment as time comes along. Nothing beats experience.
Let me also remind everyone of Yuri Pautov. He used to use a Sony 707 to produce marvelous images, mostly portraits.
http://www.dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=4349
Now he mostly uses a Sony R1 advanced digicam, and produces similar gorgeous images, consistantly awesome.
http://www.dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=31474
Don't forget this image (among many) by Andy, taken with the Sony F828:
http://www.moonriverphotography.com/popular/1/32362680/Medium
Check this gallery for the FinePix F30:
http://www.pbase.com/pschia/fuji_finepix_f30&page=all
Light, lens and camera all combine to make images, but it is the photographer, and their use of all the elements of photography, that make the best images, regardless of camera.
ziggy53
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
BTW, fill out your profile, maybe tell us where you're from? then kick back, share some photos, and enjoy.
Welcome
moderator of: The Flea Market [ guidelines ]
That being said, limitations are contigent upon strengths, and inextricably wound up in them. There are a lot of things that a P&S can be good for.
How useful is your DSLR if you don't take it with you because its too heavy.
Or if security guards see it and won't let you take it into the big sporting event.
Or if you are downloading CF cards/Changing lenses, whatever when Lance Armstrong runs by (happened to me this weekend).
Or if your subject feels uncomfortable when you point a 6 inch tube in their face, and that discomfort is visible in the shot.
A P&S always makes a nice backup, or even a principal camera. If you are starting out, it a great idea to use a cheaper digital to familiarize yourself with the sorts of things that you need out of a digital camera, and the sorts of shots that you take. It's pointless to buy a canon instead of a Nikon because you might eventually be able to get a sweet canon tilt/shift lens, and then discover that you like shooting street and doc better than architecture. (or the other way around).
A canon powershot, for example, doesn't have a sensor that different from my 20d, and my partner in crime has produced some great images with one. The best image, hands down, that I have ever seen of post 9/11 Manhattan was taken with a powershot. So use your P&S, and stand proud!