My mistake was I purchased the Fuji version of Capture One and out of 5,545 (many are duplicates) photos that I added I can edit about only 1,500 Fuji photos since the residual of over 4,000 were shot on my
Nikon 610 which I had for several years before my Fuji XT2. I should have spent about another $100 and bought the Pro version whereby you can designate the cameras used for editing.
Now that I purchased the Fuji version of Capture One including the license they will not allow me to upgrade until the revised 2021 version comes out.
I have had a full frame Nikon D610 with four lenses. I now shoot a Fuji XT2. During a visit to Arches National Park in Utah I became painfully aware aware that to hike with my Nikon kit was too heavy. When I got back home I sold my Nikon equipment and went Fuji. My photos haven't sufferent and now I can take longer hikes with my lighter Fuji gear.
I just purchase Capture One for Fuji. I had On1 for a few years. My experience thus far is that On1 is more intuitive and easier to use even though I have heard the opposite. I am having some difficulty with the Capture One online support. The video support is extremely fast and only glances over critical areas. On1, on the other hand really does a thorough job of taking it slow and covers each video very well. As you can see I am having a little buyers remorse but I will remain with Capture One and hope that it pans out eventually.
The refurbished Z7 that you are referencing is a good deal but refurbished cameras and lenses only come with a 90 day warranty while new camera come with a one year warranty. Finally, mirrorless cameras may be more complex than DSLRs. Personally, if I were looking for a Nikon Z7 or Z6 I would take not hesitate to go refurbished.
Great composition and exposure.
Did you know that with the FTZ adapter you can use all Nikon lenses on either the Z6 or Z7. These auto focus F lenses will work flawlessly on the Z camera the same as they work on a Nikon DSLR. The old manual focus F lenses will still be manual focus on the Z cameras.
What do you think a about buying a refurbished mirrorless camera and lens combo?
I subscribed to Adobe Photo Shop and Lightroom for years. Dropped Adobe and moved to On 1 and am happy with On1. I upgraded from 2018 to 2019. With the introduction of On 1 2020 I plan of staying with On1 2019 and not upgrade since often these upgrades only introduce new often not too usable upgrades.
If you have been shooting full frame why don't you consider APSC which is lighter weight than full frame and a little heavier then micro 4/3. I would suggest the Fuji XT3 with the 18 to 55 F2.8/4.0 kit lens (the best kit lens of most cameras). Finally, the Fuji 23?F2 (35mm) would be the second lens that I recommend.
One of the critical factors in buying a camera is the fun factor. Another very important consideration for a camera is the system both the camera and lens quality and lens assortment. I would oft for the Fuji XT 30 since the colors are very good, the fun factor is considerably better than the Sony 6400 and the lenses of the Fuji are outstanding and usually less expensive than Sony. Finally, the assortment of settings for film simulations (including aros, provia, velvia, classic chrome) and others are a hoot to use. For the same money go with the Fuji XT 30.
Outstanding bird and animal shots. I especially like the owl taking off.
I use ON1 on my MAC desktop and I have never had problems. I enter all my photos through Lightroom and these photos convert automatically to ON1 whereby I edit all photos in ON1. It works seemlessly.
Get the Fuji XT3. Great camera and lens are outstanding. Sony cameras are fine to, however, price the G Master lenses. For the price of a Fuji XT3, the focusing color science and the fairly priced camera and lenses you can't beat the Fuji.