I prefer the black and white, too.
I own a 60d and my 19yr old daughter owns a 6d. She does complain of the weight ... I’m not experienced enough to give advise but if it’s a concern for you thought I’d throw in that piece of information
I own a 60d and my 19yr old daughter owns a 6d. She does complain of the weight ... I’m not experienced enough to give advise but if it’s a concern for you thought I’d throw in that piece of information
I settled on the Olympus TG-5 and went ahead and ordered it so I can learn its functions before I go. I'm basically a Canon user so I'm fairly sure there will be a learning curve. Thanks, everyone for your input and help. I'll let you know how it goes. Watch for pictures in about a month!
Thanks, all. This is a great help. I will do some more reading myself and go from there. And I promise not to risk dunking, damaging, or losing my bigger gear.
I am headed to Grand Cayman in a month and one of the excursions we are signed up for is a bioluminescent bay. I would love to try and get this captured and assume it's a lot easier said than done. I'm wondering if there is an adequate underwater camera I can purchase (or rent) specifically for this and any additional snorkeling I may do. The nearest place I've found to rent camera equipment is a 90 minute drive from where I live. I currently shoot with a Cannon 60d and really don't think I'm willing to risk taking my good equipment on the water. Any advise you seasoned photographers can give me is appreciated. I'm hoping there is a lightweight affordable waterproof camera that will help me here. Is that asking too much????
Can you recommend pixel enhancement software? At this point I’m using Lightroom for my post processing but I’ve run not a couple of cropped pictures I’d love to be able to print.
Exactly what I find I am doing now ...
Thank you so much everyone. It looks like I need to be more patient and save my pennies for a better lens. The auto focus issues will be a problem when I'm shooting wildlife. It is seldom still enough to allow for decent manual focus and what I really want is to be able to get in closer and get the detail.
I am strictly a hobbyist and am looking for an affordable way to increase my capabilities. I mostly shoot wildlife, landscape, and macro. I would love to be able to get closer in on the wildlife and any enhancement I can do in macro intrigues me. Not sure what would happen with the wide angle. I shoot with a common 60D and the following lenses: 70-200 Cannon zoom (1:2.8), Tamron 10-24 (1:3.5-4.5) wide angle, Cannon 100 (1:2.8) Macro, and a couple of cheap Cannon kit lenses 75-300 zoom and 18-55 EFS (that I rarely use). I’m told I could use the teleconverter with both my zoom and my macro lens and that it should definitely be a cannon. I’m wondering what I give up here. Is there distortion or loss of clarity? Can someone with experience help me sort through this? Thanks!