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What are you using it for? Do you want a super zoom or just a simple point and shoot. I love my Nikon coolpix p520. It is a bit big if you are looking for a small compact for the bottom of your pack though.
I've go a little Fuji FinePix AX655 that works great and small. But you need to have a PHD to work it (push here dummy) - LOL
Quote from: wadu1 on September 25, 2016, 04:43:07 PMI've go a little Fuji FinePix AX655 that works great and small. But you need to have a PHD to work it (push here dummy) - LOLThat's exactly what blr needs. If it has more than 2-3 buttons he gets confoosed!
Your cell trophy kill photos, and most every outdoor touristy photo on Facebook, from your iphone suck because you don't have enough flash. Its counter intuitive, but one of the secrets to making images that stand out: the brighter the ambient daylight is, the MORE flash power you need to properly expose a subject. Getting a pocket camera wont fix this over your iphone. If you want good trophy shot pics and are willing to carry some thing in the truck in addition to your camera phone, get a used 10 year old DSLR for $75 and a cheap off brand speedlight for $50. Lighting is E-V-E-R-Y-T-H-I-N-G in photography. More than resolution, more than sensor size (full frame vs crop), etc. Set the camera to base ISO (usually ISO 100), go up to your max flash sync speed (usually 1/160-1/200), and set around f/8-f/11. Chimp your flash exposure in, salt and pepper to taste.
Quote from: Bean Counter on September 28, 2016, 02:02:48 PMYour cell trophy kill photos, and most every outdoor touristy photo on Facebook, from your iphone suck because you don't have enough flash. Its counter intuitive, but one of the secrets to making images that stand out: the brighter the ambient daylight is, the MORE flash power you need to properly expose a subject. Getting a pocket camera wont fix this over your iphone. If you want good trophy shot pics and are willing to carry some thing in the truck in addition to your camera phone, get a used 10 year old DSLR for $75 and a cheap off brand speedlight for $50. Lighting is E-V-E-R-Y-T-H-I-N-G in photography. More than resolution, more than sensor size (full frame vs crop), etc. Set the camera to base ISO (usually ISO 100), go up to your max flash sync speed (usually 1/160-1/200), and set around f/8-f/11. Chimp your flash exposure in, salt and pepper to taste. This is intereating. I've been digging around and most things I read are saying even a simple point and shoot is gonna give you better printed pictures than a cell phone. I've been very unhappy with the quality of printed pics I get off my cell phone. I'm a backpack hunter so the dslr is a no go
Quote from: BLRman on September 28, 2016, 03:14:00 PMQuote from: Bean Counter on September 28, 2016, 02:02:48 PMYour cell trophy kill photos, and most every outdoor touristy photo on Facebook, from your iphone suck because you don't have enough flash. Its counter intuitive, but one of the secrets to making images that stand out: the brighter the ambient daylight is, the MORE flash power you need to properly expose a subject. Getting a pocket camera wont fix this over your iphone. If you want good trophy shot pics and are willing to carry some thing in the truck in addition to your camera phone, get a used 10 year old DSLR for $75 and a cheap off brand speedlight for $50. Lighting is E-V-E-R-Y-T-H-I-N-G in photography. More than resolution, more than sensor size (full frame vs crop), etc. Set the camera to base ISO (usually ISO 100), go up to your max flash sync speed (usually 1/160-1/200), and set around f/8-f/11. Chimp your flash exposure in, salt and pepper to taste. This is intereating. I've been digging around and most things I read are saying even a simple point and shoot is gonna give you better printed pictures than a cell phone. I've been very unhappy with the quality of printed pics I get off my cell phone. I'm a backpack hunter so the dslr is a no go Then the best thing you can do is to drag your deer to a shaded area and not do the trophy shot backlit in sunlight. Clean, even dark shade like trees or a hillside without the sky visible in the background. At that point, the size of the sensor will be the biggest determinant of image quality as 12 megapixels on a full frame sensor will give you more dynamic range (ergo greater signal-to-noise ratio ergo more shadow recovery) than 12 megapixels on your cell phone or p-n-s.There are some pocket cameras that have a hotshoe for a dedicated flash head. Perhaps a good compromise would be a smaller dedicated flash unit like a Canon EX 270 or the Nikon SB-400. These are weaker than a real speedlight so get close as possible to minimize light falloff (law of inverse squares). You'll need to belt it out at full power and so you wont get a lot of exposures on one set of batteries. So get your ambient exposure correct with the camera alone before turning the flash head on and trying to do two things at once
https://www.amazon.com/gp/aw/d/B00U5LKQEE/ref=pd_aw_sim_421_2?ie=UTF8&psc=1&refRID=3M2C4KT21NPMJZWS04BXHere's just the first one I foundI really like the idea of juSt using the Bluetooth lenses and flash devices for the phone for a light weight set up but am skeptical of picture quality and don't wana sacrifice the funds atm to find out
I'm so confoosed now! Maybe I just need to hire a sherpa to haul camera gear............and then use it
I have owned several Canon Power Shot ELPH cameras, the one I have now has been dropped several times and still works fine. They seem to be easy to figure out and the least expensive is around $120, they go up to about $250 if you want a bunch of bells and whistles. Just about all the stores have them, try BiMart, Walmart or Fred Meyers.
BLR: how about posting up some photos you aren't happy with and we can better diagnose whether its a gear or technique issue?
Here are a couple of super cheap, KISS P&S digital cameras that would meet what you are looking for:https://www.walmart.com/ip/Nikon-16.1-MP-26500/46620221https://www.walmart.com/ip/Canon-20-MP/49839336
If they start looking pixellated its often because the image was cropped too much. Try to zoom with your feet and frame the image correctly in camera, if you start with a 22 megapixel camera and crop 50% in its like you now only have an 8 megapixel camera.
I really like my Olympus TG-4, waterproof to 50 feet, shock "proof" to five or so. Takes nice photos. It can sync to your phone for taking photos remotely. It also has great battery life.The negative is that it only has a 4X zoom.
Quote from: lokidog on September 29, 2016, 09:44:33 PMI really like my Olympus TG-4, waterproof to 50 feet, shock "proof" to five or so. Takes nice photos. It can sync to your phone for taking photos remotely. It also has great battery life.The negative is that it only has a 4X zoom. It's on my "check it out" list! Thanks!