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#15
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Butch Davis wrote:
Wow!!! Guys, all very intereting stuff. I love it when a thread gets kinda highjacked and the result is more and better information. You're all forgiven. :=) Excellent point on the photo printer. I have been leaning toward the Epson PM280 @ $200 or so for the on board capabilities plus the ability to burn a CD on board. Plus, it's pretty portable. Based on what you've said, however, I'm going to try the lab route at first and see if it's not a better solution. As to software, I can see I need to look into that a little more. That's just too much information to absorb immediately. I've always liked SLR film cameras and used a wide variety back in the late fifties and early sixties. I don't think the EVF will bother me as I used a Rollie (2Xlens reflex) 2 1/4 X 3 1/4 with 120 roll film for a while and liked the large image.... next best thing to a Graflex with a ground glass back. I thought the Graflex was the absolute best and most versitile but it got heavy after a bit of time. Add that weight to the old and enormous Honywell strobe with wet cell batteries and the Rollie became a great device. Assorted 35mms were wonderful, too, but the strobe was so large we attached the camera to the flash head. I still own and use a Kodak Retina II but it really needs to be overhauled. Where to do it is going to be a problem, I guess. Back then we did all our own black & white printing but the color work went to Technicolor Labs. I used to love darkroom work and waching the prints as they came up. Enlarger work was fun too and I became a reasonably talented "dodger" befor joining the Army and giving all that up. I was just a kid then and going hungry and sleeping on friends sofas didn't bother me much. I'll tell you something for nothing.... free lance press work was a very tough racket in those days. But, on my goodness all the girls we used to meet. Butch Buy whatever sort of camera you'll use a lot. With the smaller, non-SLR cameras, just make sure by reading reviews that you are getting a good optical zoom lens. We just returned from a week's vacation, and I took my wife's little Canon A710 digital and one of my rangefinder film cameras. I left the SLRs at home because they are big, bulky, and heavy. For a digital camera, my wife's little Canon takes as nice a vacation snapshot as you'd like, and it fits into a pants pocket. Printing digital color photos is fun, but it is not as inexpensive as having an outside service do it. A decent photo printer you use to print the occasional print might be the ticket. I have a Canon i9900 printer, and it does a terrific job with larger prints. It has 8 inkwells, as it were. Almost any software you feel comfortable with will handle 90% of your "processing" needs. I have the latest Photoshop, but only because I can buy the "academic" versions at a really low price. I don't doctor up my photos much, though. I compose through the viewfinder, and if I am taking "nature" photos, I like the photos to represent what I saw, not what I would have liked to have seen. Keep it simple is the best approach, at least for me. |