Mercutio
Fatwah on Western Digital
There are a number of people here who take photography very, very seriously so...
Last August I went an, um, outdoor festival. Some of you might remember me posting about it ("More than Corn in Indiana", in the Pub).
I had a camera - not the Canon G2 that belonged to me, but my brother's point-and-shoot Digital Elph (I don't remember the model number, but it was 2MP job with a 2x zoom).
As it happens I gave the G2 to someone who has a more-than-bi-monthly need to do something with it. I probably won't get it back.
But I just had the interesting thought that I might, possibly, go to that festival again, and that would be a case for needing a camera. And I also need one to do the odd shot of computer equipment (e.g. for insurance purposes or for on-site documentation).
So rather than blithely ordering something - my first impulse is just to get a Canon G5 or Digital Rebel (i.e. possibly more camera than I need) that would sit in a bag 360 days out of a year - I thought I'd throw this to LunarMist and Tannin and Splash and the rest of you:
I'd like to get a camera that is well suited to broad-daylight photography, that can be used to shoot very quickly and that has a very good optical zoom. CF is almost a requirement - I have several high-capacity CF cards and a couple of microdrives already, but it's not like I can't afford to buy into something different instead.
My ex- was a professional photographer (she did photos at reunions and weddings and the like), so for her the manual settings on the G2 are very important, which is in large part why I bought it. I have some understanding of those settings, but I can't say that I changed them that often, and I'm not so sure that any change I ever made actually helped in my photos, so part of this question is: Would I be just as well-served with a $200 point-and-shoot given my needs?
The other half of my thought process is this: What the heck can I do to take better pictures in the setting I'll be working in (crowded, daylight, subjects 2 - 30 meters away)? As a general rule those aren't conditions I can simulate, since for the most part I don't really like being outside (bad allergies) or near other people (multiple bad neuroses).
Advice or suggestions of books on how to improve photos in general would probably be appreciated. I have some art training but I find it very difficult to translate between a media where I have total control - pen and ink, for example - to a photo, where I can only capture what's in the lens.
Last August I went an, um, outdoor festival. Some of you might remember me posting about it ("More than Corn in Indiana", in the Pub).
I had a camera - not the Canon G2 that belonged to me, but my brother's point-and-shoot Digital Elph (I don't remember the model number, but it was 2MP job with a 2x zoom).
As it happens I gave the G2 to someone who has a more-than-bi-monthly need to do something with it. I probably won't get it back.
But I just had the interesting thought that I might, possibly, go to that festival again, and that would be a case for needing a camera. And I also need one to do the odd shot of computer equipment (e.g. for insurance purposes or for on-site documentation).
So rather than blithely ordering something - my first impulse is just to get a Canon G5 or Digital Rebel (i.e. possibly more camera than I need) that would sit in a bag 360 days out of a year - I thought I'd throw this to LunarMist and Tannin and Splash and the rest of you:
I'd like to get a camera that is well suited to broad-daylight photography, that can be used to shoot very quickly and that has a very good optical zoom. CF is almost a requirement - I have several high-capacity CF cards and a couple of microdrives already, but it's not like I can't afford to buy into something different instead.
My ex- was a professional photographer (she did photos at reunions and weddings and the like), so for her the manual settings on the G2 are very important, which is in large part why I bought it. I have some understanding of those settings, but I can't say that I changed them that often, and I'm not so sure that any change I ever made actually helped in my photos, so part of this question is: Would I be just as well-served with a $200 point-and-shoot given my needs?
The other half of my thought process is this: What the heck can I do to take better pictures in the setting I'll be working in (crowded, daylight, subjects 2 - 30 meters away)? As a general rule those aren't conditions I can simulate, since for the most part I don't really like being outside (bad allergies) or near other people (multiple bad neuroses).
Advice or suggestions of books on how to improve photos in general would probably be appreciated. I have some art training but I find it very difficult to translate between a media where I have total control - pen and ink, for example - to a photo, where I can only capture what's in the lens.