GusPhilpott wrote:
My interest in photography started when I was about 7-8 years old. I lived in University City, Mo., just west of St. Louis. At the time I'd ride the bus downtown and walk over to the rail yards with my Baby Brownie Special. It was no big deal to walk between rows of boxcars and take pictures of cars, cabooses, engines, switches. I had a darkroom and developed and printed those rolls of Kodak 120 B&W film.
In high school I worked as a sidelight assistant for a wedding photographer. Also worked in his darkroom. We used a SpeedGraphic 4x5 on an aluminum frame with a Leica 35mm mounted on top. My suits had baggy pockets from toting around spare 4x5 filmholders.
Then the darkroom chemicals did a number on my hands (contact dermatitis) and I had to give up the darkroom work. Wearing gloves only made things worse.
In the spring of 1981 I bought a Nikon FE and hauled it through the Grand Canyon on a private raft trip. There were 15 of us in three little rafts for 23 days. Sure wish I'd taken many more rolls of 35mm color film! The waterproof GI ammo can kept it safe and dry.
Finally I went digital, but with a little point-and-shoot that I could keep handy on the front seat of the car.
I'm here to re-kindle my interest in photography and to pick out a "good" camera. I guess the choice will come down to a good point-and-shoot, maybe in the $500 range, or a DSLR. Sure would like to learn about managing photo albums online, too.
My interest in photography started when I was abou... (
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Welcome to the UHH. I too had many good point @ shoots but jumped in with a Nikon D750 full frame with a 24-120 f/4. now have a 150-600 Tamron G2 for nature and a few old AI lenses I use in manual focus from my film days with excellent results. Your budget puts you in an entry level DSLR crop frame camera which I suggest so you can swap lenses. Nikon and Cannon have the widest selection of lenses available for crop frame. FF is another story and more expensive. There are several "super zoom or bridge" cameras out there too like the Nikon P900 without interchangeable lenses but super range zooms and limited features.