Canon has been used in both our families for years so it's a trusted brand here. She did a ton of research to find the best value for features and I am super excited about the camera. I've already been able to catch the kids in action better than I was capable of with previous point and shoots.
Most recently I have been using the Panasonic Lumix DMC-TZ5 (great but it picked up a scratch recently and photos were showing up with a blur), the Sony Cybershot (bought in Tunis, Tunisia when I realized I forgot to pack the charger for the Panasonic and could not find a charger in the city), and several over older models.
For our trip to Nicaragua I got to use a Nikon Coolpix AW100 waterproof point and shoot. This camera took great photos, had very little options (good for some), and was waterproof. But not waterproof enough. It gave out on us part way through the trip unfortunately when some water leaked into the housing and fried it.
I've also been a firm believer in not picking up a Digital SLR until I was no longer carrying diapers, emergency changes of clothes, and other items for young kids. So, the time was right to move up to something new to play with.
Here are a couple of the pics I've taken so far.
This one is of my youngest. He is super active so getting a non-blurry photo of him can be difficult. I went with the Moving Subjects mode for this photo to catch him in action as we played outside.
Tonight I tried taking a photo of the boys Dragon Castle, first with the Fully Automatic Shooting mode, flash on:
Then I tried with HDR Backlight Control, meant for backlight conditions but which works in low light conditions as well. This mode takes 3 photos rapidly, with each photo at a different exposure setting. The photos are then combined to make one photo. Here is the same castle with HDR in the same lighting conditions with flash:
I also experimented with one of my favourite techniques of focusing on the foreground and blurring the background. Technically, this has to do with focal length and such but basically, tilt the camera to cause it to focus at the close distance of your foreground, then tilt it back up to take in our background and you'll get the effect. This can be harder with point and shoot cameras. Here's one of those using my sons table top soccer game from earlier in the evening:
Well, that's one of my current new pastimes. Now back to practicing another, guitar.
Yeah, a good DSLR can really help when you're trying to catch pictures of those fast movers. That actually reminds me that I need to get my Nikon out to get some updated pictures of my little monsters! They both move too fast for the point-and-shoot. :-)
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