Digital Photography: Choosing Your Camera
This information is Copyright January 2006 by
http://www.santaclausca.com and Loring Windblad. References for
this article include the author's personal knowledge and
experience. Additional information references with first
article. This article may be freely copied and used on other web
sites only if it is copied complete with all links and text,
including this header, intact and unchanged except for minor
improvements such as misspellings and typos.
OK, you have read my article Digital Photography: The Basics,
and checked out all the references above and their good
information, and you are ready to decide on your new camera. The
final pieces of choosing your digital camera are determining
just what you are going to use the camera for and how much money
you have available to invest in your camera. Your considerations
should be 1) your purpose for using the camera, 2) quality of
product (particularly the lens), 3) megapixel rating of the
camera and 4) buy the best camera you can afford.
Are you really ready to buy just yet? Well, maybe, then again,
maybe not? Your overriding consideration for this purchase must
be quality of image. Almost equally of importance is your
intended use. Are you going into photography as a professional?
As an amateur? To make video records? Still image records? A
combination of still and video? How much local processing will
you be doing on your pictures - i.e., color corrections,
readying them for internet use, putting them into just libraries
or creating presentations with them? How many pictures will you
be taking at a time; i.e., how much memory will you need for
your camera before you dump the pictures onto your computer?
Do you need a video camera which will provide JPG stills? Do you
need a video camera which will provide both JPG stills and MPG
video as well as regular video? Do you need a still camera (JPG)
which will provide you AVI or MPG video clips? Or do you need a
professional quality SLR which will provide JPG still images
only?
Simply saying "I'm going to get the best, most expensive,
digital SLR I can find" doe not mean this camera will meet your
photographic needs. What if you want, or need, both digital
stills and digital video? Check both of my video presentations
at http://www.santaclausca.com. Note the sound problems in the
first one which has partially been corrected in the second one.
First, I am no longer involved in professional photography
except coincidentally. So I guess that means "Yes, I am involved
in professional photography" - at least as far as the above link
goes, with my Santa Claus work. We started with my wanting a
good quality 35mm SLR when we got married. And I replaced it
with a better one a few years later. Then we decided we wanted
to add video, and got a high-end JVC VHS camcorder, one of the
new smaller ones. A few years into that and we decided to go
with digital video. We went with a Sony TRV 140. It gives us
Digital Video on Digital 8 tape; it also provides us with JPG
still images in the 640x480 range at about 125 kb each and
15-second video MPG, both on the "memory stick". However, the
"quality" of the still images is the equal of a 2 to 4 megapixel
still camera which produces images in the .6 to 1.2 megabyte
range.
This was such a great improvement over the VHS camcorder that I
purchased a second Sony TRV 150 a year later, which is even
better in some respects. Image quality is very high. We can make
a video and take still images without interrupting the video at
all. We can make 1-minute long video MPG directly on the memory
stick with the JPG images. And with our new computers we can
take the video output directly off the camera and onto our
computers in a digital video format.
I added a cheap Mercury 3.1 mp digital camera and it was nice
but overall very unsatisfactory, and very slow recovering from
taking a picture and getting ready for the next picture. I found
a discontinued Minolta 2 mp digital camera for a reasonable
price that actually took better pictures, had a 3X optical zoom
lens (the equivalent of 35mm to 135mm lens on a 35mm SLR) and
was not so slow on recovery and readying as the Mercury. It was
also less susceptible to blurring if you did not hold it
perfectly still - a better shutter action.
Later I found on an eBay auction a Fuji 2.2 mp digital camera
which I accidentally won high bid on? Hah! That'll teach me to
play around with bidding on my account before I know what I'm
doing. It could have been a financial disaster but I knew the
price of the camera retail ($299) and the price I bid ($150) and
I actually got a pretty good deal. Particularly when there were
9 others of the same Fuji model and none of them went for under
$220 each.
I have learned some differences between my Minolta and Fuji.
These include 4 AA batteries for the Fuji and 2 AA batteries for
the Minolta. This boils down to a brighter flash and better
flash results from the Fuji over the Minolta. It also makes for
slightly less lag time moving from one function to the next and
a faster shutter time (less delay) when you take a picture. The
resultant pictures are about 865 mb compared to 675 mb from the
Minolta. But if I need audio on the AVI video clips the Fuji
does not provide it. I have to use the Minolta for audio tracks
on the video clips.
I'm actually very satisfied with both cameras, and with the two
Sony digital video cameras as well. And while the digital still
image quality from the Sony jpg's is very high, the 125 kb size
does not allow printing of anything larger than 4"x6" while I
can print very satisfactory 8"x10" pictures from both the Fuji
and Minolta cameras. I have two 256 MB SD memory sticks for the
Fuji and Minolta digital cameras, each of which provides about
285 pictures. Nice for trips somewhere. And I have a 128 MB and
64 MB chip as well.
As to the Sony video cameras, they do come in handy. We do most
of our picture taking with the Memory Stick and JPG/MPG pictures
and video clips. This is a lot of fun and makes for nice
memories. A few times, however, I have been called upon to take
videos of presentations, 1-2-3 hours long. The Sony video
cameras come in very handy for those, too. But on trips or
traveling around, my sweetie usually carries the Sony while I
carry the digital and film still cameras.
We actually chose the Hi8 digital format when we purchased our
Sony cameras a few years ago; were we to make the same decisions
today we would simply go with the straight digital format
instead of Hi8. For the Sony's, we have two 64 MB memory sticks
for the TRV-140 and we have two 256 MB memory sticks for the
TRV-150. If we did no video clips at all the 256 MB memory stick
would give us almost 2000 jpg images and make a standard
1-hour-per-tape home movie at the same time. Three hours of
video plus 2000 still pictures would cover a very long trip.
However, when I really need versatility and the highest quality
possible, I continue to use my 35mm Minolta film camera. It
takes about 20 mp of digital picture to equal the quality of the
35mm film results - and we aren't there yet. The last I checked
we were at about 12 mp for digital quality. So I still shoot a
lot of film; I just process it anymore by having it put right to
CD in digital format, with no prints. I usually start out any
trip we take with 10 rolls of 35mm film of the finest grain I
can get by with - ASA 100.
So lets take one final look at the "image quality" question. 125
kb from the Sony, as high quality as the lenses are, simply does
not compare to 675 or 865 kb from the Minolta and Fuji still
cameras. Nor do they compare even remotely to the 925 kb
pictures I get from the film. And that's a bone of contention
for me because 2 years ago my film pictures came back at about
1.5 mb each; then all of a sudden a couple of years ago they
started coming back at 1.1-1.2 mb and for the last year plus
they are in the 900 kb range? The quality is still good, but
we're dealing with pixels here rather than film grain.
If you have any kind of angled surface - i.e., any angle not
either vertical or horizontal - you will have a low-resolution
result. The reason is that pixels are squares. When my film
(dots of color) is converted to digital (squares of color) I
lose the higher resolution capability of dots to produce angled
and curved lines.
OK, you say, I've got 8 megapixels. That gives me much better
resolution than your 2.2 megapixels? Well, yes it does but not
near as good as my film camera provides! Nor good enough to make
18X24 or 24X30 prints. 12 megapixels still only gives us high
quality at 11X14 or perhaps 16X20. The reason is that as the
little squares of color become visible they tend to blur the
edges of angled and rounded objects whereas the dots from a film
negative tend to keep those same lines sharp. So even though the
film gives me higher resolution, the conversion to digital
format costs me some resolution.
There's one more important factor that goes into this matter
before you decide on your particular camera needs. This is the
difference between optical zoom and digital zoom. Let's say that
you get a camera with 3X optical and 4X digital zoom and they
"sell you" on this model because it is "effectively 12X zoom"!
And well, yes, it is "effectively 12X zoom"! But just what does
that mean? Not all that much.
The optical zoom part is the only important factor. Typically a
3X optical zoom on a digital camera would give you a lens that
corresponded to 35mm x 135 mm focal length on a 35mm camera -
i.e., wide angle to short telephoto (actually what used to be
known as a "portrait" lens). What the digital feature actually
does is not enlarge your image but enlarge your pixels. This
actually reduces the quality of the resultant picture because it
is reducing the total number of pixels per square inch in your
final product. The other downside of digital zoom is that you
must put your camera on a tripod and make sure you don't jiggle
it when you snap the shutter - otherwise you will definitely get
blurred pictures.
As you can see, choosing your camera or cameras to fit your
needs is not all that quick and easy and may actually involve
owning more than one camera. Maybe several cameras. But for your
still image work you should choose a camera that has at least 6X
to 10X optical zoom (totally disregarding any claims for digital
zoom) and 4-5 megapixels or larger image. Also, make sure that
the camera has a mike pickup for digital video sequences. You
don't need to use this capability but you can't use it if you
don't have it.
So now you have your cameras and you need to know what to do
with the pictures? Well, see my next article, Digital
Photography: Using Windows XP (to manage your digital pictures).