As a photographer, one question that I get asked frequently is which DSLR is a good choice for a beginner who wants to buy a camera. Although there’s not a single correct answer, here are some things to keep in mind.

Brand

I recommend either Canon on Nikon. Those two companies have something like 90% of the market share. While Sony, Olympus, and Pentax make good cameras, for someone who is likely to have a lot of questions, those questions will be easier to answer with a Canon or Nikon system. Either Canon or Nikon will produce great images… so which should you choose? I suggest that folks consider two factors. If you have existing SLR lenses, check and see if they’re compatible with Nikon or Canon’s systems. If they are, that’s a strong reason to stick with your brand. Another thing to consider is if your friends primarily use a given brand, it will be easier to get questions answered or possibly borrow lenses.

Price

Getting serious with photography with a DSLR is going to cost a significant amount of money. That said, I don’t advocate for a beginner to immediately drop a few thousand dollars on top-of-the-line gear. Before spending TOO much money, I recommend a more affordable system until one decides just how serious they’re going to be about their photography.

An important consideration is that when it comes to image quality, the lenses (casually referred to as “glass”) are as important, if not more important, than the camera body. Keep this in mind when budgeting for equipment. Don’t go buy a $2,000 body and then put on a $200 lens. My recommendation is to get one of relatively inexpensive “lower end” DSLRs to learn with, and get some decent lenses with the plan that the lenses will outlast the camera when (and if) you eventually upgrade to a fancier body in the future.

Key Features: Which Numbers Matter

This is going to contradict what a lot of retailers would like you to think, but megapixels are irrelevant. All of the DSLRs on the market have more than enough megapixels to create good-sized prints or enlargements, so unless you’re going bigger 16×20, don’t worry about the number of megapixels. All of the DSLRs will work in an automatic mode as well as allowing manual adjustments of things such as shutter speed, aperture, exposure compensation, and even ISO.

As you move up in price with DSLRs, you’ll gain better low light sensitivity, a faster frame rate (number of photos per second), more external buttons and knobs, and the option to record video.

For a beginner, the entry-level cameras will really teach you everything you need to know, and you won’t gain anything significant by moving up a level.

Where to Buy?

You’ll find the best deals online, but beware of too-good-to-be-true deals… there are a lot of shady folks that sell “gray market” imported cameras for what seem to be dirt cheap prices until you realize they’ll upsell you on all sorts of unnecessary accessories.

If you’re going to buy online, I recommend Amazon or B&H Photo.

If you’d like to get your hands on a camera and purchase from a retail establishment, talk with local photographers and find the best brick-and-mortar store in your area. I live near Portland, Oregon and really like Pro Photo Supply. A photography store with knowledgeable sales staff will give you a much better experience than a nationwide big box retailer.

Conclusions: What Should You Buy?

If you’re going to go Canon, my recommendation would be the Canon Digital Rebel XSi (Amazon, B&H). For Nikon shooters, take a look at the Nikon D3000 (Amazon, B&H). Either one of those options will give you a decent camera body with an 18-55mm starter lens for less than $600.

Get a camera and start taking photos. Either of the ones I recommended will take great photos, and despite what some equipment brand-zealots might tell you, the quality of photographs will depend far more on the technical and artistic talent of the photographer than the particular model of camera being used.

The links above represent my affiliation with vendors that I use and recommend. Purchasing via these links will result in me getting a (small) commission supports this site. Thanks!

These other posts might be of interest to you:

  1. Great Camera & Photography Deals for Father’s Day
  2. Pro Photographers Won’t Use In-Camera HDR

When it comes to talented photographers who “get it” with social media, Kris Krüg‘s name is often near the top of that list. Kris will be speaking at WebVisions in Portland on May 19th and presenting a three hour workshop titled “Photography Tips from the New School.” In addition to the morning workshop, there will be an afternoon photowalk around Portland. What will he be speaking about?
WebVisions logo

Kris will discuss creating your own style through photo manipulation, publishing on multiple online channels, the changing faces of photography equipment and software, in addition to setting up the composition of a shoot and lighting techniques. In a few hours, photographers of all levels will have the knowledge to navigate the online world with confidence!

The event’s organizers have extended a special offer to Social Photo Talk readers: attend the photo workshop (and the rest of the conference) for only $350, which is a $75 savings off of the usual price.

Register for the workshop on the WebVisions site using this link to receive the special discount.

Photographers are often a gear-obsessed bunch, and we occasionally talk about gear and products here, so I thought it might be interested to take a look at the best-selling items in Amazon.com’s Camera & Photo category as we reach the end of June 2010:

What the Duck?What’s interesting to me is that there are a couple themes at the top of the bestsellers lists: pocket-sized video cameras and waterproof cameras.

  1. Flip UltraHD Camcorder, 120 Minutes (Black) – a very affordable mini camera from the company that made the category popular.
  2. Kodak PlaySport (Zx3) HD Waterproof Pocket Video Camera (Black) – A waterproof camera, likely to be popular for those summer watersporting activities.
  3. Canon PowerShot S90 10MP Digital Camera – the Canon S90 is my pocket camera of choice – great images and a huge set of features for a camera of its size.
  4. Polaroid t1031 10.0 MP Digital Still Camera – it’s a 10 megapixel camera for less than $65. Wow.
  5. Fujifilm FinePix XP10 12 MP Waterproof Digital Camera – another waterproof camera, this time of the still variety
  6. Canon PowerShot SD780IS 12.1 MP Digital Camera – Canon’s PowerShot SD series cameras have been popular for a long time… I wasn’t surprised to see the SD780 amongst today’s most popular products
  7. Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS7 12.1 MP Digital Camera – Panasonic has become a big player in the compact camera market in the last couple of years…
  8. Flip UltraHD Camcorder, 120 Minutes (White) – the pale version of the product that’s at the top of the bestseller list.
  9. Canon EOS Rebel T1i 15.1 MP CMOS Digital SLR Camera and EF-S 18-55mm f/3.5-5.6 IS Lens – the only DSLR to make the top 10 bestsellers is Canon’s T1i, offering great still images and HD video.
  10. Kodak Zi8 Pocket Video Camera (Black) – Kodak’s popular Zi8 pocket video camera wraps up the top 10 list.

Check out these products – if you use the links above and end up purchasing through Amazon, a small commission will be returned to me that helps fund the operation of this site. Thanks for your support!

If you’re new here, you can keep up with my latest photography information at Picture Pundit – subscribe to my newsletter for a FREE Report: A Guide to Twitter for Photographers.

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Episode 22 of the Social Photo Podcast is ready. Hosts Aaron Hockley and Lyza Danger Gardner talk about blogging for photographers, an iPad update, Easy Release, browsing photos on the iPad, wallpapers, Adobe’s lens correction features coming soon, and more. This episode is about fifteen minutes long.

Racing StarsLinks to Things We Mention

Distribution and Feed

We’re now on iTunes – if you use iTunes, you can subscribe using this link: Subscribe on iTunes

You can also find the podcast as an attachment to the main Social Photo Talk RSS Feed. You should see a player at the bottom of this post if you want to listen directly, or you can grab the Episode 22 mp3 file directly.

Feedback

We’d love to have your feedback – technical, content, or otherwise. Leave a comment here or send mail to [email protected] – thanks!

Photo by Andrew Stawarz, used under Creative Commons licensing

These other posts might be of interest to you:

  1. Social Photo Podcast #19: iPad, iPad, iPad, and Adobe
  2. Social Photo Podcast #16: iPad Poll Results, URL Shorteners, Andy Adams Interview, Call for Questions
  3. Social Photo Podcast #14: More iPad talk, eBooks, HDR

Subscribe via iTunes:this link will launch iTunes for easy subscription

Here’s episode 21 of the Social Photo Podcast. Hosts Aaron Hockley and Lyza Danger Gardner talk about how Lyza’s lost camera was returned due to social media, the outsourcing of blog content, whether Google is going to put you out of business, and more. This episode is about fourteen minutes long.

Ghost Forest, Sleeping Bear PointLinks to Things We Mention

Distribution and Feed

We’re now on iTunes – if you use iTunes, you can subscribe using this link: Subscribe on iTunes

You can also find the podcast as an attachment to the main Social Photo Talk RSS Feed. You should see a player at the bottom of this post if you want to listen directly, or you can grab the Episode 21 mp3 file directly.

Feedback

We’d love to have your feedback – technical, content, or otherwise. Leave a comment here or send mail to [email protected] – thanks!

Photo by Matt Callow, used under Creative Commons licensing

These other posts might be of interest to you:

  1. Social Photo Podcast #22: Blogging, iPad Updates, Easy Release, Adobe’s Lens Correction
  2. Social Photo Podcast #23: Facebook, Better Blogging, iPhone Marketing App, Lightroom 3 Publishing
  3. Social Photo Podcast #12: How Do You Learn? Twitter Contests, Barriers to Blog Comments

If you’re new here, you can keep up with my latest photography information at Picture Pundit – subscribe to my newsletter for a FREE Report: A Guide to Twitter for Photographers.

Subscribe via iTunes:this link will launch iTunes for easy subscription

We’re all set with episode 17 of the Social Photo Podcast. Hosts Aaron Hockley and Lyza Danger Gardner recap SXSW Interactive, talk about copyright infringement by a major newspaper, and more. This episode is about sixteen minutes long.

Fire SparksLinks to Things We Mention

Distribution and Feed

We’re now on iTunes – if you use iTunes, you can subscribe using this link: Subscribe on iTunes

You can also find the podcast as an attachment to the main Social Photo Talk RSS Feed. You should see a player at the bottom of this post if you want to listen directly, or you can grab the Episode 17 mp3 file directly.

Feedback

We’d love to have your feedback – technical, content, or otherwise. Leave a comment here or send mail to [email protected] – thanks!

Photo by kirrus, used under Creative Commons licensing

These other posts might be of interest to you:

  1. Social Photo Podcast #5: Copyright and Property Releases, Stock Photography and Journalism, Photo Sharing Poll Results
  2. Social Photo Podcast #21: Google’s Photo Business, Social Media Lost and Found, Outsourcing Your Blogging
  3. Social Photo Podcast #12: How Do You Learn? Twitter Contests, Barriers to Blog Comments

Subscribe via iTunes:this link will launch iTunes for easy subscription

Here we go with Episode 15 of the Social Photo Podcast. Host Aaron Hockley talks about the beefier Social Photo Talk newsletter, Flickr contact notifications, an interview with Shane Rich, and more. This episode is about fourteen minutes long.

Earjams in earLinks to Things We Mention

Distribution and Feed

We’re now on iTunes – if you use iTunes, you can subscribe using this link: Subscribe on iTunes

You can also find the podcast as an attachment to the main Social Photo Talk RSS Feed. You should see a player at the bottom of this post if you want to listen directly, or you can grab the Episode 15 mp3 file directly.

Feedback

We’d love to have your feedback – technical, content, or otherwise. Leave a comment here or send mail to [email protected] – thanks!

Photo by Neil T, used under Creative Commons licensing

Today we feature a guest post. Sahdev Thakur has over 10 years of experience in technology and outsourcing businesses. His love for photos has inspired him develop innovate business model for photos using social media. He is currently CEO and Founder of PixWand a Delaware Company.

As a photographer, 15 years back, when the Internet sun was just rising, if someone were to ask you to start your own website, your first question would have been, “What’s a website?” The second, “Why would I ever need one?” Do you find yourself asking similar questions today when you see the rise and rise of social media… first MySpace, then Orkut, now LinkedIn, Twitter, Facebook… who knows what’s next? Stressful, isn’t it?

Whether you are a fan of online social networks or not, you cannot deny the simple fact that they are enormously popular, for a few simple reasons: they make it easier for people to connect with old friends, make new friends from corners of the world, which one couldn’t possibly imagine in the good old days, and share information, ideas, jokes, photographs, videos… whatever suits one’s fancy. Whether you and I like it or not, social networking is changing the way we connect, communicate, share, develop relationships and thus, the way we conduct business as well.

Consider these simple facts about social media:

  • Facebook has 400 million active users, including 225 million who joined in just the last one year.
  • Twitter has 75 million users with an annual growth rate of 1,105%.
  • Linkedin has 60 million members and has added 5 million users in less then 2 months between Dec 2009 to Feb 2010.
  • An average user spends more then 5.5 hrs per month on social networking sites like Facebook and Twitter, an 82% increase from last year.
  • All the above numbers are changing drastically by the hour.

Picture of photo in photo in photo ...Now as a professional dealing with photography, consider this whopping fact: on Facebook alone more then 3 billion photographs are uploaded every month, i.e. 100 million photos a day (Source). Thanks largely to the proliferation of digital cameras (every device seems to have one these days, mobile phones, mp3 players, laptops, etc.), today almost everyone clicks photos and uploads them. Whether this qualifies for them to call themselves photographers is a different question.

What is evident however is today everyone considers himself or herself a photographer. This is a huge shift and it is accelerating at a very rapid rate.

Impact of social media on the photography industry:

With billions of photos taken every month, photography is no more considered an art. Rather, it has simply become a way to share our lives and communicate with those around us: something that conversations did in the past. And all the pervasive ways social media is touching peoples’ lives is altering consumer behavior and developing new imaging habits today. Thus, the future of photography for photographers is not what it used to be. The future is changing, and it is for you to figure out, what more you can do with photos, what unique services you can offer. Indeed, what more can you offer?

Collaboration will be the way of the future. Social media platforms facilitate connection and collaboration with individuals and groups across the world to offer innovative photographic services. An example: PhotoTownship. Shortly PhotoTownship will provide a unique opportunity for mass customization and collaboration of photo products/services online. It will allow individuals to do more with photos beyond the format of printed paper.

People are starting to see the broader possibilities of photos and various things they can do with them. There’s a whole shift of perception happening. This is just the beginning of a whole new world, and the sooner we embrace it, the better it is for the entire photographic community.

Some social media resources:

The number of photographers or small businesses using social media well is very small. Below are two great resources to get you started with social media and also help you explore further

  • PhotoFizz.info: Content is king. So, a good way to get started in social networking is to start by sharing good content.
  • PhotoShelter’s report on Social Media for Photographers: A free guide on how to grow your photo business with social media

Luckily the monetary investment in social media is hardly anything, and allows even the smallest company or individual to play on a level playing field with those bigger than they are. Take advantage of this opportunity by getting in early, to grow into a leader in the social media space.

If you still doubt the power of social media, view Social Media Revolution on YouTube. It presents the kind of statistics that shows the extent to which social media is conquering culture and businesses across the world. It is bound to get you excited about the changes around, and the possibilities it opens up.

Photo by dariuszman86, used under Creative Commons licensing

Happy Monday! I’m not sure how things are going for you but I’ve been really busy lately with a variety of photo gigs. I have a bunch of random social media tips and tricks laying around here gathering dust, so I figured I’d put together a list post and share.

    Corral

  • Don’t get folks into a Twitter->Facebook->Website loop. We talk about blogging, and using Facebook to promote that blog, and also sometimes tweeting links to your work. Make sure that you aren’t tweeting a link to Facebook which then forces someone to click through to another site to read an article or look at your photos. If you’re sharing a link, that link should go directly to the source material.
  • Check out your Facebook Page insights. If you’re the administrator of a page, on the left side under the page’s photo you’ll find the insights section, where you can click through to get some information on who is a fan of your page and what they’re doing.
  • Realize that folks don’t monitor Twitter constantly. It’s a good idea to post a link a couple times at different hours of the day. Make sure that you don’t post too often or folks might think you’re being a bit spammy.
  • Network online with vendors related to your area of photography. If you shoot weddings, make sure you’re keeping up with local florists. If you do a lot of music photography, it doesn’t hurt to stay tuned in (pun intended) with what local production companies are doing.
  • Better yet, once you’ve established relationships with those vendors, partner up for some online cross-promotion. You can talk about how great they are to do business with, show some photos of their products or services, and potentially send some business in their direction. You could offer them some of your photos (ideally showcasing their wares) for use on their blog or online materials. It’s a win-win.
  • If you’re active on Twitter, you’ve probably got a lot of other photographers (pro and/or hobbyist) in your area that are following you. Host a tweetup/photowalk! Most photographers would enjoy the networking and photo opportunities of getting together for a couple hours and wandering around taking pictures.
  • I’ll wrap up this list with a reminder that social media isn’t a “get rich quick” system: if you’re doing it right, you’ll build up followers and trust over a period of months and years. You’re developing relationships that will (hopefully) lead to increased business and a higher profile for yourself and your business.

What other ideas are on your mind this morning? Have a social media tip to share? I’d love to have you leave a comment and share your knowledge.

Photo by tombothetominator, used under Creative Commons licensing

If you’re new here, you can keep up with my latest photography information at Picture Pundit – subscribe to my newsletter for a FREE Report: A Guide to Twitter for Photographers.

Are you thinking about how hot political issues might be costing you business due to your social media personas? Here are a few of my thoughts and warnings:

Do you mix these topics into the streams that your clients see? Why or why not?

These other posts might be of interest to you:

  1. Social Photo Podcast #21: Google’s Photo Business, Social Media Lost and Found, Outsourcing Your Blogging
  2. Starting an Email Newsletter as a Photographer
  3. Retrospective on my 2009 in Social Media