drklrd wrote:
Great just keep in mind there is more ahead than you currently think there is, especially in equipment plus the learning phase of all the gear and how to recover gracefully when a camera or lens bites the dust while you are working. I use 2 D7200's currently but I had a backup that was tried and true that I used for a year but a year later when I needed due to failure on a D7200 I found I had forgotten everything I knew about the backup camera. During film days it was easy as it was all mechanical and most cameras needed no technical info to operate Basically good with a Hasselblad you are good to go with a Bronica SQA. In digital you have so many buttons and dials to use that if not used often or at least sometimes you forget what they all do. My failure that day was that a setting on the D7200 reset all my settings to default mode which just confused me as I was making ready for an opening sports shot changing to the other body stalled me a bit but then I started to remember and got the shot I was prepping for. To solve that problem I bought another D7200 and set then both to the same settings. After business classes do take a full course in still photography. The PP of A has many courses in photography take them.
Great just keep in mind there is more ahead than y... (
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