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Suggests for a digital camera


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Here on my country estate, Webby Towers, I get a lot of wildlife in my garden which I'm wanting to photograph (this morning I had stoats frolicking in the sun on the lawn).

 

My current digital camera is pretty old - something like 2 mpix resolution, x4 optical zoom - so I've got no chance of getting a close-up of my fury friends,

 

One option would be a camera with a dirty great optical zoom on it, although presumably a higher resolution would help too, as once I'd taken the pictures, I'd be able to zoom in more on the computer without loosing so much image quality.

 

There seems to be a lot of overlap in functionality with digital camcorders too, and often they have much better zoom than a camera, but are a lot cheaper. So that's the first question: would I be better with a camcorder, and just taking stills with it?

 

Standing at the window with a camera all day gets a bit boring though. Maybe I'd be best off with a camera which has a motion sensor built in. I know this feature is available in things like security cameras, but is it also available in digital cameras?

 

Yet another option would be to buy a cheapo digital camera, take the back off, and attached a 30 foot bit of cable so that I could cause it to take pictures from a distance away by closing the circuit.

 

Any suggestions?

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I have a friend who is a photographer and I've picked up a few things talking to him. You seem to have the basics covered, Optical zoom over digital zoom and high megapixels.... one thing he always says is try before you buy, and check the quality that way as some boast high digital zoom and high megapixels but the camera doesn't pick up colours very well and also pictures can look grainy.

 

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Kill two birds with one stone and get a camera phone. This one's pretty cheap:

 

Nokia.jpg

Edited by barracad

Opinions given herein are made informally by myself as a lay-person in good faith based on personal experience. For legal advice you must always consult a registered and insured lawyer.

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Often ( most often ) a video camera's digital still capabilities are far inferior to it's moving image abilities. I see your reasoning for a digital camcorder, but they dont really cut it for stills ( boo ) due to resolution and CCD sizing etc.

 

I've never yet seen anything to beat a decent stills camera ( be it digital or film )

 

Panasonic Lumix range are particularly nice at the moment.

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Wotcha Webby, photographing the local wildlife eh? ;)

 

I have a Fuji Finepix S5700 and it is the dogs danglies.

 

I will forward some pics that I took at the eden project last year and you will see what I mean (that is, if I can find your email addy)

Lula

 

Lula v Abbey - Settled

Lula v Abbey (2) - Settled

Lula v Abbey (3) - Stayed

 

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I use the below and LOVE the results:

 

Canon 40D Dslr body

Canon 28-135mm IS lens

Canon 70-200mm F4l L series

 

I have had both the lenses for approx 4 years and they have survived high degrees of humidity, drops in less than padded camera bags and general use. I bought the 40D last August and it is in my eyes the best camera Canon have made, with that said Canon has just released news that the 50D will be out soon.

 

I confess I am a photography geek - but I love it!

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'Which?' magazine happen to have a good 5 page feature on cameras in the issue for this September. They tested 21 digital compact models and 5 DSLR models. Not that means much to me. I will happily scan and email you the report if you aren't able to get hold of the magazine from someone. Or I could photobucket it as well I suppose.

What sort of world do you want your kids to grow up in?

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we have a

Canon Powershot S5 IS

 

specs

 

Technical Specification.

Style

Extended Zoom

Megapixels

8

Resolution

3264 x 2448, 2592 x 1944, 2048 x 1536, 1600 x 1200, 640 x 480, 3264 x 1832

File Formats

JPEG

Memory Cards

SD/SDHC

Zoom

12x

Focal Length Equivalent

36 - 432mm

Shutter Speed

15 1/3200 seconds

Aperture

f/2.7 - f/3.5

Sensitivity

Auto, 80, 100, 200, 400, 800, 1600

White Balance Settings

Auto, Daylight, Cloudy, Tungsten, Fluorescent, Fluorescent H, Flash, Custom

ExposureCompensation

-2EV to +2EV (in 1/3EV steps)

Viewfinder

Electronic

LCD Screen

2.5 inches

Flash Modes

Auto, Manual Flash On / Off, Slow Sync Speed, Red-eye Reduction

Flash Range

5.2m

Shooting Modes

Portrait, Landscape, Night Snapshot, Sports, Stitch Assist, Movie, Indoor, Night Scene, Foliage, Snow, Beach, Fireworks, Aquarium

Maximum Movie Resolution

640 x 480 pixels

Maximum Movie Frames Per Second

30 fps

Maximum Movie Duration

Up to 4GB or 1 hour

Macro Focus

0cms

Metering

Multi-pattern, centre weighted, spot

ManualControls

Shutter priority, Aperture priority, Manual

Image Stabilisation

Yes

Lens Converters

Yes

Self Timer

10 seconds or 2 seconds

Video Out (TV Playback)

Yes

Computer Connection

Yes

Batteries

AA

Dimensions

117 x 80 x 77.7 mm

Weight

450g

 

takes fantastic photos, but if i knew how to use it :confused: might be easier, then i could get the best from it :D

so i really rely on my fugi finepix A405, and that does me ;)

honey x

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