woodstock
Final Approach
http://skywalkerbeth.blogspot.com/2011/01/fueled-by-macarons.html
Later tonight I will flesh it out a little more, this is a start.
Later tonight I will flesh it out a little more, this is a start.
Absolutely!Beth you have a great eye ( excuse the irony of that statement) but you really do your photos always capture the key things.
Capn, how nice of you! I'm not sure if you'd learn a whole lot, but it sounds fun nonetheless...
Eric - I'm usually a champ with jetlag. I have found that I prefer the late night departure/late morning arrivals. If you take off at 10 PM, by the time everyone settles in it is midnight and it's easier to doze (not sleep, but doze). When you land, it is 5 or 6 AM according to your body clock which is MUCH easier to get up and start moving around for the rest of the day, than say arriving at 6 AM (midnight your body clock) and then have to move around all day.
One week, two weeks, two days... I'm fine.
Thank, Sure wish I was a champ. We like to travel but more than 2 or 3 times zones and I need a day or two. Did much better when I was 25. Have to try going to the East coast and then to Western Europe.
The inside shots of the stairs - 3200. Love this camera.
Many of these photos were taken on ISO 3200. ISO 3200! On my 30D (4,5 yrs old) that isn't even possible. 3200 in "film terms" would be unmanageable grain. Anything you see that is indoors, or not "bright outdoor daylight" would be at 3200 or darn close. Many of the street sign shots were taken barely after sunup which means 2500-3200 ISO. It just "looks" brighter because the camera compensated so well.
The inside shots of the stairs - 3200. Love this camera.
What are you shooting with these days?
Canon 7D! Good camera.
Yes, it is! In fact, it's a great camera. And I probably would have bought one by now if they'd used SD instead of CF cards. (Who the hell uses CF any more?!?) But I guess that's OK, it's really too much camera for me right now. That 60D, though, I might be able to grow into... And someday maybe I'll get good enough for a 7D.
Nice pics!
Pro-end stuff still uses CF. I also have a 7D and love it. The memory card type was a non-issue.
I am certainly no expert, but I don't get the sense that the SD cards are fast enough. I could be wrong.
I'd go 7D and bypass the 60D. The controls and whatnot are pretty much the same. The guts are what are better. You aren't buying "more camera than you can fly", you are buying better innards.
The reason it's an issue for me is that CF cards seem to be a lot more expensive than their SD brethren, and more importantly you can't get an EyeFi in CF and that's something I'd really like to do some things with.
Well, even the 60D will be a learning curve for me. After all, I'm coming from an iPhone and my previous Nikon 3.2MP P&S. I'm a rookie.![]()
Also, for the difference in price between the two, I don't find the 7D compelling enough to spend the extra bucks. Especially now that I'm back to being a "starving" college student, I've gotten back into money-conservation mode and if I were to spend a hunk of $$$ on a DSLR today, I would focus more of the money towards getting good EF lenses rather than a fancy-schmancy body... The 60D is enough to keep me happy for a long time, I think. Of course, by the time I buy Canon will probably be up to the 70D or 80D...
Ah, OK, but you can also get a wifi adaptor from Canon. Yeah, it's more money, but it's less kludgy.
You can also get SD to CF adapters.
And that's perfect justification. Besides, like computer technology, in 5 years you'll want something better.
The reason it's an issue for me is that CF cards seem to be a lot more expensive than their SD brethren, and more importantly you can't get an EyeFi in CF and that's something I'd really like to do some things with.
Well, the 1Ds Mark III has slots for both CF and SD... I wish they'd have done that with some of their lower-end cameras.
Also, Wikipedia claims that speeds are comparable between the two.
Well, even the 60D will be a learning curve for me. After all, I'm coming from an iPhone and my previous Nikon 3.2MP P&S. I'm a rookie.
Also, for the difference in price between the two, I don't find the 7D compelling enough to spend the extra bucks. Especially now that I'm back to being a "starving" college student, I've gotten back into money-conservation mode and if I were to spend a hunk of $$$ on a DSLR today, I would focus more of the money towards getting good EF lenses rather than a fancy-schmancy body... The 60D is enough to keep me happy for a long time, I think. Of course, by the time I buy Canon will probably be up to the 70D or 80D...
1. the best glass you can afford is a much smarter investment. Stay away from EFS, it may prove to be a waste of money if you get serious one day.
2. if you are hoping to save cash for now, buy a used 30D. Good camera, I kept my old one. I didn't "need" the new 7D, I just wanted it. The 30D was doing a great job. That said, now that I've played with the 7D clearly there have been upgrades. 3200 ISO for starters...
3. Consider the S90 if you want a pocket camera. Impressive and the size of a deck of cards.