Fastfashn said:
:bang: So, I figured I'd give it a try, sold all my film gear, got an Oly E500 dual lens kit.
Oh... Error. Error. Error.
The lens quality, after years of Contax, is making me nuts.
I read good stuff about the kit lenses, though for best performance, you should give the f2.0 and f2.8 lenses a try, they're fabulous (I hear). And anyway, like somebody already mentioned, lots of other manufacturers' lenses can be used with convertor rings.
Fastfashn said:
I hate the buttons, the screen that gets dirty when you rub your nose on it, the stupid 'finder, the placement of the white balance button and the exposure lock...
So true, all these fiddly digicam thingies are the main reason I don't want yet. They can do a lot, but they don't have the good old big buttons like the cameras I like.
Fastfashn said:
I can't get the rez I want at over 200iso 'cause the chip is noisy.
Since I can see the grain of Kodak Portra 160VC on a meagre 3MP scan, I'd be very very very very surprised if any 8MP camera gives you less image quality when printed by a decent lab. My theory is that you're either disappointed by the feel of the camera and no longer objective about the image quality, or you have studied the pixels of your photos on a screen and confuse the result there with a good print. Darn, I've seen plenty of el cheapo digicams with less resolution and smaller sensors than the E500 generate far less noisy results than film. When I compare pushing ISO on a digital camera to underexposing film, the digital side holds itself together much better. A retired photographer I know swears by the 3200ISO mode of his 6MP Pentax *istD (using a zoom lens).
This "comparison" is done without any darkroom work, of course, because that would be comparing apples and oranges. I drop my film off at the lab which develops & scans for me. I don't consider photoshop to be a disadvantage of digital, because I hardly process my photos. Rotate, crop, contrast and perspective are the edits I do in descending order of frequency (probably around 20%, 10%, 2%, <1%).
Fastfashn said:
I also hate all these RAW conversion programs, each independently trying to figure out what the image is supposed to look like.
True, the software cycle is also a pain in the proverbial. I guess computers are the main example of how engineering for quality turned into producing for money in the last half a century. But, again, this has nothing to do with image quality IMHO. My extremely unscientific comparison above included digital P&S cameras.
EDIT: 2 small tweaks after reading the whole thread. Plus, I'd like to add that I don't currently have a digital camera. I'm waiting for a model like the Fuji F11 that allows me to use aperture priority mode in a simple way. But not having a digital camera doesn't stop me from shooting all I want: film is cheap, the opportunity is expensive.
Peter.