nikon professional film camera

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nikon professional film camera
What camera should I get?

I want a camera for professional photography. I understand that it can be quite expensive, but I chose this as a career and I want to start saving for one as soon as possible. But there are so many brands and models and things. I want a Nikon. Should I get a digital or film camera. What objectives? What model should I get? And why, please. Just not a normal type digital to take pictures at random. I have one and I just want a very very good that will last and worth the money. Thank you.

Okay, your desire for a Nikon is good, really only have two choices Nikon and Canon, those are the two only manufacturers that can meet all your needs and I agree with you that Nikon is a better option, I use Nikon myself. So, that said, if you is really serious about photography I suggest that you start with the top consumer model, the D90. He still has a program online and there are still many things for you at the same while incorporating a host of professional features in the deal. You can make happy two or three years depending on what you like photography. The other option is the lower end of the professional series, the D300. This is harder, you have to set the camera itself to get that produce outstanding images, but when he does the results are often impressive. There are no more line program. This is not a camera for the casual user, if you do not use all the time you'll forget how to work all the controls and you get frustrated a lot. You can go for the higher end cameras from Nikon, but I find that if you're starting the two that suggest more than enough to learn. By the time you are ready for which there are more high-end models have been improved once again making all ways worth the wait longer. In terms of objectives, which is a hard one. The lens of love most is the 18-200 mm lens from Nikon. I travel with you all the time. It is reasonably light, it gives me an incredible zoom range from wide angle to telephoto, and avoids me having to change lenses all the time. But it is a goal, unfortunately slow and not exactly the best Nikon has to offer. They have three others also zooms 14-24mm ($ 2,000), a 24-70mm ($ 2,000) and 70-200mm ($ 2600) each of which creates sharp stunning images. I have the first and the plan of purchasing the other two later. The lens will give amazing results but at a great price, of course. I think if you are starting the 18-200 mm is probably your best bet. The aim is to consider a macro lens and has an incredible Nikon 106mm macro that has a built in stabilizer image. I used this goal for four years and it is amazing what you can do with it. Beyond that other goals are special lenses that cost a lot money and only justified if you need their specific skills. You have to decide for yourself in the coming years. Finally – in comparison with digital film … I do not see a contest here. I shot film for a little over thirty years (mostly Kodachrome slides) and then went digital. Initially, digital images can not compare but my current Nikon SLR is to produce images that are equal to anything I did in my days of cinema. The subtle variations in light and color, et al out very well. So there's no way I'm going back to the movie although I still have all that way. The film is interesting to do, especially in the slides, since it forces you to get the right image every time. With slides you can not fix anything later. So the film shooting undoubtedly refine their shooting skills. But this has an amazing cost and time frame. Digital, at least, it shows you instantly what he has done for what they are capable of learning faster and is a hell of a lot cheaper to use too. It costs you nothing to take thousands of images in one afternoon, when you go digital, how much it will cost, if not the movie? So I recommend you go to digital cinema and completely forget. The world is going that way and even the inventor of the film, Kodak, is to recognize that. No longer will occur after this Kodachrome year. So there really is no point spending a lot of money for a technology that is not going to keep growing in coming years. Hope this helps a little. Good luck!

Tokina AT-X 124 AF PRO DX AF 12-24mm f/4 tokina 12-24


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