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Digital Photography, Is It Right For You?
by Jeff Colburn
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Lately,
people have been asking me the same question over and over, "Should
I buy a digital camera?" And for everyone that asks, I have the
perfect answer. Maybe.
There are many factors that go into the decision about going digital,
not the least being whether you are a professional or amateur photographer.
You need to ask yourself how you will use your photographs. Will
they be for your website, magazine articles, stock agencies, advertising
or something else? You then have to do some research and see what
each of these markets asks for. Stock agencies love digital, as
do many ad agencies, but most magazines want slides.
Do you want to stay with film? Great. Film still gives better image
quality than digital. However, in a year or two digital will probably
rival film. You also need to consider that film manufacturers are
reducing the range of film they produce. I was amazed when a few
months ago the owner of my local camera store told me that Kodak
is going to discontinue Kodachrome 25 soon, and within two years
discontinue Kodachrome 64 and 200. Film manufacturers know that
eventually digital will take over, and they don't want to be caught
flatfooted. So they're making fewer types of film, and starting
to manufacture digital camera.
You also need to consider the costs of going digital. A professional
digital camera or camera back, will cost between $5,000 and $15,000.
These prices are dropping quickly, but they are still high. There's
also the need for a computer (like a Mac G4 at $2,500), PhotoShop
7 ($600), high end printer (at least $500), maybe a scanner ($500
and up) and possible external data storage devices. This along with
time spent manipulating each image in a computer, after you learn
to use the computer and software, archiving each image on several
sets of CD's so you can store at least one set offsite. An off-site
set protects your images from being lost due to flood, fire, theft
or some other catastrophe. As you can see, digital will eat up lots
of time and money.
One way to get into digital, but save some money, is to go the hybrid
route. Shoot with film, make some great prints then scan them into
a computer using a flatbed or drum scanner. You can also scan negatives
and prints directly. Some photo labs can even do the scanning for
you. Many professional photographers go this route to have the best
of both worlds. They can use their existing film cameras, while
having digital images.
Still not sure which way to go? You could buy a nice digital camera,
with at least 3.1 megapixels, for under $1,000 and give it a try.
You can even buy a printer that connects directly to the camera,
so you don't need a computer.
If you do decide to buy digital cameras, ask the same questions
you would for film cameras. What lenses, shutter speeds, ISO's and
flash sync speed do you need? What subjects will you shoot, in what
kind of lighting and how portable does it need to be? Do you need
to end up with prints, digital images or slides?
Then talk to photographers that you know, or that you can find on
newsgroups, and see if they use the camera you're looking at, and
what they think of it. If you live in a large city, you can probably
rent the camera you want, and if you decide to buy it you may even
be able to apply your rental fees toward the purchase price.
So don't jump on the digital bandwagon just because everyone else
seems to be doing it. A camera is a tool. Select the proper tool
to meet your needs. You will be happier and your pictures will look
better.
Want to know what some of the pros are using for digital? Check
this out.
Cameras
Canon EOS-ID and D30
Nikon DI
Computers
Macintosh PowerBook G3 and G4
Sony Vaio PC
Scanners
Agfa DuoScan and Arcus 2
Flextight Precision II
Imacon Precision II
Nikon Coolscan 8000
Scanview Scanmate 11000 drum scanner
UMAX PowerLook 1100 with transparency attachment
Printers
Epson 1160, 1270, 1280, 5500 and 10000
Software
Adobe Photoshop 6.0 and 7.0
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| About
the Author |
Jeff
Colburn's books, "The Writer's Dictionary Of Science Fiction, Fantasy,
Horror and Mythology" and "The Youngest Ninja," can be purchased
from his site, The Creative Cauldron at www.CreativeCauldron.com.
The Creative Cauldron is a site filled with information for writers,
photographers, artists and other creative people.
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