stenojj wrote:
I went with the T6s because of the extra features over the T6 and T6i. I am just getting started and still have lots to learn. I am getting some pretty decent shots with the lenses I own so not disappointed at all with this camera. Sometimes I get disappointed, but I realize it's "me" and not the camera. Guess everybody thinks it's the camera that makes a good photographer. Maybe down deep I think that sometimes too!
Thanks for your input.
I've only read the responses on the first page, but you keep repeating "with the lenses I have" but to don't list those lenses.
As you can see, I have my equipment listed in my signature.
Could you please list the lenses if you have not already done so. If you did list them, I'll eventually see that list.
But my suggestion is that
IF you do purchase any new lenses, that you start looking at lenses that will work on both crop sensor as well as on full frame cameras. The investment will be worth it if you do decide on a full frame camera in the future. Also, if there is a choice between a v1, or later version of a lens, go with the newer model because the improvements will be worth it down the line.
Don't be afraid to trade up on your existing lenses, they're not doing anything for your photography if you don't take them out and use them on a regular basis! I have a rather costly lens that I replaced a faulty lens with, and I've only used it twice in the last year. So for me, it's time to sell or trade in that lens! No, it's NOT my 100-400, that one was a gift from my cousin, and it virtually lives on my camera right now! I'm already looking at replacing my other 3 lenses with models that aren't "KIT" lenses!
I design and create jewelry, and I'm going to be getting a bunch of boxes of beads later today from a friend who is getting them from a family member. The only cost to me is the gasoline for one and a half trips to her house today (she has my vehicle right now) and again later this week for the second batch of boxes! I'm going to need to take pictures of the finished pieces to market and sell them. I might need to keep my 105 mm lens to shoot the pieces with!
So, determine if your existing lenses are actually working
for you, or if they've become extra weight in your bag, because you don't use them often enough, or at all now!