taffer
void
>Is DSLR a good learning tool?
If somebody is really willing to learn, it's just as good as any other 🙂
If somebody is really willing to learn, it's just as good as any other 🙂
bmattock said:However, for certain creative effects, I bolt on a circa-1942 Kodak Aero Ektar 178mm f2.5 with a cobbled-up M42 adapter and produce DOF effects like nothing you've ever seen before. When I really want to pig it up, I go to the same lens on a Bessaflex TM body with Fuji Velvia film.
No I guess not, but it doesn't stop you from getting to interesting places and meeting all kinds of nice people. Better still, this may just be a supreme conversation starter..shutterflower said:If you learn to ride a bike with training wheels, and never remove the training wheels, have you really learned to ride?
nomade said:I kinda agree, it saves plenty of time, yet some has to learn it the harder way...Money wise, a DSLR could be somewhat expensive, more expensive than any # of rolls u'd buy and waste learning...Mostly it's heavy(maybe many of u wouldn't feel the difference but i'm a girl who can't handle that load for a long time)...And then when u decide on using film, u'll have to learn some stuff again..
This is a question with a yes and no answer.nickchew said:Does the DSLR revolution impact positively on LEARNING photography or not?
nomade said:I kinda agree, it saves plenty of time, yet some has to learn it the harder way...Money wise, a DSLR could be somewhat expensive, more expensive than any # of rolls u'd buy and waste learning...Mostly it's heavy(maybe many of u wouldn't feel the difference but i'm a girl who can't handle that load for a long time)...And then when u decide on using film, u'll have to learn some stuff again..
MCTuomey said:It seems to me that it doesn't matter much what equipment you use to learn to photograph.
VinceC said:But I've still been known to take a pen to paper when I really want to give a subject some serious thought.