OK, so as many of you know, I am planning a really cool trip to Arizona and Southern Utah. This is one of those "Once in a lifetime" deals (well twice, I did this trip as a teenager almost 25 years ago) and I don't want to miss a thing. I m kind of wanting to do a photo journal experience and blog about it.
Here's my problem. I have a REALLY REALLY REALLY just "ok" camera. (sanyo t1495)
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I guess it is my fault, really, I bought it on clearance at Walmart. It was only 79$ and is a 14mp point and shoot digital camera. Nothing special. I thought "Hey it's 14mp and it's on clearance. This sounds like a good idea to me!"
CONS:
It takes Good pictures. GOOD...not great. Decent. But I don't want decent. I want great.
It has 14 million "settings" I can choose from. Water. Sunset. Sunrise. man. woman.pets.night sky. mountains. So every time I want to take a picture of something specific, I can go all the way into my menu, choose presets and toggle one of these special functions and it will automatically set to ISO and Aperture/f stop thingamajig. Those pictures tend to turn out really nice, it is just a matter of toggling those settings. What happens when I need to do something fast because I don't want to miss a shot, but here I am stuck trying to get my functions together? I wound up with a missed shot, or a crappy shot because I didn't pick the setting I wanted(or mis-picked)
I can only set the ISO speed manually. It wont allow me to set my own shutter speed, my own aperture etc.
And if I have it on Auto, everything turns out kind of grainy and just "blah". Unless it is a decent day outside...not too bright, not too cloudy. Then they are great. But lets be honest. Southern Utah and Arizona in the middle of July. It is going to be bright. It is going to be hot. These auto photos don't stand a chance.
PROS:
it takes fantastic Macro function photos. I get crisp, clean gorgeous detail, which is one of the reasons I got that camera in the first place. (photographing my jewelry, flowers and other things close up)
, it is slim, easily pocketed and lightweight.
If I do use the preset settings, the photos really are nice.
it is easy to use, point and shoot and it is pretty idiot proof as far as what buttons to push and how to get into menus etc.
It has a tripod mount and a great self timer.
WHAT TO DO??
So here's my dilemma. I am sure I will be taking close up macro photo settings of the various cacti and flora, so that camera is a plus. However I am not going to be wanting to fiddle with my speeds and presets every time I take a picture. That camera is a con.
HELP!
I need a new POINT AND SHOOT camera that will take good pictures both normal and macro. I need something that I wont have to fiddle with a whole heck of a lot. Something I can just point and shoot.
I am not wanting anything with a zillion lenses to tote around. I am not wanting something that I have to have a PhD in engineering to figure out how to use. I want a camera that is lightweight and not too bulky.
Something that I can take photos of the night sky while in the desert, yet the next day be taking photos of waterfalls, animals, kids, hoodoos and more.
AND most importantly, it needs to be affordable. My budget is NOT very flexible these days.
I would like something with a minimum 10mp.
So any point and shoot recommendations would be greatly appreciated. And please no foreign language spam to some questionable website with knockoffs of purses, shoes, tablets etc.
THANKS IN ADVANCE!
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3 comments:
Our point and shoot is a Cannon Powershot and I've really loved it. I finally have my DSLR and I'm really struggling to figure it out. Ugh. So if you want to borrow my Powershot for a few days to try it out, feel free. :)
I am a nikon girl so when I tell you Canon reigns supreme for point and shoot cameras, you know you can trust me!! if you someone recommends a nikon point and shoot, find the canon that is it's equivalent and you will have got the better deal. not sure what your price range, but anything under $100 is going to be crap, so you may want to stick with what you have! My best recommendation: http://www.amazon.com/Canon-PowerShot-ELPH-300-HS/dp/B004J41T7Q
likely to be buying one myself pretty soon, tired of hauling my D90 around. good luck!
p.s. don't let the megapixels fool you, anything from 6-10 is going to give you great images. Anything over that becomes superfluous.
Well if you want something better you are going to have to search a little bit more intro the pocket. Go for a Nikon if you want really great quality go for an entry level dslr like the D3100 or if you want a lot of zoom go for a Coolpix P510 or a cheaper L310 depends on what you want . Hope it helps :)
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