D
Deleted member 68495
Guest
I have a phone camera which I hardly use, I have a compact camera of decent quality which I take with me most the time when at work and out and about (Fujifilm X20) but I also have a Nikon D7000.
I get reasonable pictures from my phone if that's all I have with me and good quality pictures from my Fuji. Sometimes I wonder if I should bother any more with a large and cumbersome DSLR...
...then I use it! Bliss!
I have a bog-standard, old, Vauxhall 1600 estate which gets me around, it accelerates very well and suits me, it serves it's purpose and I sometimes wonder if I should sell my motorbike and the car and just get a nice new car...
...then I get back on the bike! Bliss!
There is no substitute for quality.
I would be disappointed, very, if DSLR's should bite the dust due to the onset of phone cameras and would probably give up photography, but before that happens I have two things in my favour; I am nearly sixty and will probably die before DLR's do and I have an A3 Plus printer -- which I use. No one with a camera phone prints pictures, the pictures taken are ephemeral, easily forgotten and pointless. They serve to show a friend a funny clip or an "I was there" moment and then are most likely never seen again after the phone is ungraded..."oh I had a photo of that on my old phone, pity, it's gone now."
It is not the camera on the phone that will cause the demise of the DSLR, it is the lack of software to easily save and process your pictures from a mobile phone that will save it.
I think DSLR's will be here for some time to come and the secret is not to try to constantly upgrade to the 'next best thing', be happy with what you have so long as it works because no one needs more than 16 Mp unless you want to decorate the side of the Shard.
There is a picture of a Nikon FM2 above, I had one, an excellent camera. Had it not been for the inevitable demise of film I would still have it, it would still work, and I would replace my meter battery once every five years. It was a joy to hold and a joy to use and I miss it. I shall not so easily be persuaded to part with my d7000 as it does all that I wish of it -- and it blows any phone camera out of the water!
I get reasonable pictures from my phone if that's all I have with me and good quality pictures from my Fuji. Sometimes I wonder if I should bother any more with a large and cumbersome DSLR...
...then I use it! Bliss!
I have a bog-standard, old, Vauxhall 1600 estate which gets me around, it accelerates very well and suits me, it serves it's purpose and I sometimes wonder if I should sell my motorbike and the car and just get a nice new car...
...then I get back on the bike! Bliss!
There is no substitute for quality.
I would be disappointed, very, if DSLR's should bite the dust due to the onset of phone cameras and would probably give up photography, but before that happens I have two things in my favour; I am nearly sixty and will probably die before DLR's do and I have an A3 Plus printer -- which I use. No one with a camera phone prints pictures, the pictures taken are ephemeral, easily forgotten and pointless. They serve to show a friend a funny clip or an "I was there" moment and then are most likely never seen again after the phone is ungraded..."oh I had a photo of that on my old phone, pity, it's gone now."
It is not the camera on the phone that will cause the demise of the DSLR, it is the lack of software to easily save and process your pictures from a mobile phone that will save it.
I think DSLR's will be here for some time to come and the secret is not to try to constantly upgrade to the 'next best thing', be happy with what you have so long as it works because no one needs more than 16 Mp unless you want to decorate the side of the Shard.
There is a picture of a Nikon FM2 above, I had one, an excellent camera. Had it not been for the inevitable demise of film I would still have it, it would still work, and I would replace my meter battery once every five years. It was a joy to hold and a joy to use and I miss it. I shall not so easily be persuaded to part with my d7000 as it does all that I wish of it -- and it blows any phone camera out of the water!