I'm after a decent HD camcorder which also takes good stills, anyone know of any?
cheers
Current thoughts - Mago out or get running up them plantations, get fit or get rid. Maybe a back up halfback, someone with a bit of experience on a short term deal. Big tall strong running second rower, like a McMeekin or Sironen type back rower.
post wrote:I'm after a decent HD camcorder which also takes good stills, anyone know of any?
cheers
Fuji cameras take reasonable video footage, the S1850 I used for a basic video shot in the mountains and the sound was excellent and even though I had a crummy low speed card the video footage was more than acceptable, not grainy/jerky at all. They take pretty decent stills as well I'm sure many other companies pro-sumer type cameras do the same thing, many well under £200, even under £150 in some cases.
Joined: Mar 08 2002 Posts: 26578 Location: On the set of NEDS...
OoOGazOoO wrote:Sigma or Tamron 70-300mm as a first telephoto lens for a beginner to DSLR?
I'm 100% Sigma at the moment, really good value lenses when you step up to F2.8, for a beginner though I like the Canon 55-250mm IS, plenty of reach, good image stabilization, holds its resale value really well too. At around £100 it is a steal http://bit.ly/Ic5kXA
OoOGazOoO wrote:Sigma or Tamron 70-300mm as a first telephoto lens for a beginner to DSLR?
I'm 100% Sigma at the moment, really good value lenses when you step up to F2.8, for a beginner though I like the Canon 55-250mm IS, plenty of reach, good image stabilization, holds its resale value really well too. At around £100 it is a steal http://bit.ly/Ic5kXA
Big Graeme wrote:I'm 100% Sigma at the moment, really good value lenses when you step up to F2.8, for a beginner though I like the Canon 55-250mm IS, plenty of reach, good image stabilization, holds its resale value really well too. At around £100 it is a steal http://bit.ly/Ic5kXA
Thanks Graeme, needs to be Nikon fit though, should have said in my original post.
I have just got a D3100, but looking for a 'first' telephoto lens, for beginner purposes, etc... Was looking at the Sigma or the Tamron.
Thanks again!
Big Graeme wrote:I'm 100% Sigma at the moment, really good value lenses when you step up to F2.8, for a beginner though I like the Canon 55-250mm IS, plenty of reach, good image stabilization, holds its resale value really well too. At around £100 it is a steal http://bit.ly/Ic5kXA
Thanks Graeme, needs to be Nikon fit though, should have said in my original post.
I have just got a D3100, but looking for a 'first' telephoto lens, for beginner purposes, etc... Was looking at the Sigma or the Tamron.
Joined: Aug 13 2002 Posts: 1777 Location: Horsforth, Leeds
Big Graeme wrote:Ah, Sigma all the way then.
In terms of what the Yanks call "bang per buck' then I absolutely agree.
The Nikon lenses sometimes have the edge with image quality but it's not necessarily a given.
The only problem I've ever had with a Sigma lens is with my 150-500. This a great vfm lens and fast enough to shoot rugby in good light at ISO400-800, but although it worked perfectly with my late, lamented D200, I'm told it needs to be "re-engineered" (WTF that means) in order to work with my D300s.
Joined: Mar 08 2002 Posts: 26578 Location: On the set of NEDS...
LeedsBornWelshRoots wrote:In terms of what the Yanks call "bang per buck' then I absolutely agree.
The Nikon lenses sometimes have the edge with image quality but it's not necessarily a given.
The only problem I've ever had with a Sigma lens is with my 150-500. This a great vfm lens and fast enough to shoot rugby in good light at ISO400-800, but although it worked perfectly with my late, lamented D200, I'm told it needs to be "re-engineered" (WTF that means) in order to work with my D300s.
No experience with Nikon lenses so I was unable to offer advice. I upgraded all my lenses to f2.8 in the last two years, to buy Canon lenses it would have cost me a fortune, to do it with second user Sigmas it was fairly painless, apart from the 70-200mm.
That 150-500mm just needs a chip swapped out, Canon later model cameras have the same issue, if you have an old fashioned camera shop close by they should be able to help, I think it costs around £90 if you get Sigma to do it.
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