RichC
Well-known
<shrug>
Mountains out of molehills...
1. All the professional or serious photographers I know have the talent to see and capture an event or scene regardless of how much or little they use the features of their digital cameras. That single key ability is what makes them photographers.
2. Digital cameras are of course designed so you can use as few or as many features as you desire. They can be used in exactly the same way as, say, a manual 1950s camera without the "bells and whistles" causing any compromise whatsoever.
I shoot with a Nikon D800E dSLR. Most of the time I use manual-focus lenses with the camera in manual mode with centre-weighted exposure and single-point focus, and typically only two controls: shutter speed and aperture. I rarely change the ISO from 400. (It's a little embarrassing when I lend my camera to friends as they can ask how to set or change something but I often have no idea!)
But I like having the option of more features (I do use my camera in auto mode sometimes, eg on holiday)
As an aside, I see no advantages to a "fully manual" dSLR. It wouldn't be much smaller or lighter or easier to use, but as few people would want it the price would be horrific so as to cover costs and make a reasonable profit. Not to mention loss of versatility.
Mountains out of molehills...
1. All the professional or serious photographers I know have the talent to see and capture an event or scene regardless of how much or little they use the features of their digital cameras. That single key ability is what makes them photographers.
2. Digital cameras are of course designed so you can use as few or as many features as you desire. They can be used in exactly the same way as, say, a manual 1950s camera without the "bells and whistles" causing any compromise whatsoever.
I shoot with a Nikon D800E dSLR. Most of the time I use manual-focus lenses with the camera in manual mode with centre-weighted exposure and single-point focus, and typically only two controls: shutter speed and aperture. I rarely change the ISO from 400. (It's a little embarrassing when I lend my camera to friends as they can ask how to set or change something but I often have no idea!)
But I like having the option of more features (I do use my camera in auto mode sometimes, eg on holiday)
As an aside, I see no advantages to a "fully manual" dSLR. It wouldn't be much smaller or lighter or easier to use, but as few people would want it the price would be horrific so as to cover costs and make a reasonable profit. Not to mention loss of versatility.