Better Photos - Photography Camera Reviews Digital Cameras Section

 

Photography Camera Reviews Digital Cameras Navigation



Art Digital Photography Education
Tip Trick Digital Photography
Profile On Digital Photography Jobs
Digital Photography Book
Digital Photography Storage
Digital Photography Lab
What Is The Best Digital Camera For Sports Photography
Digital Photography Chat
Uk Digital Photography
Digital Photography Lighting Tips
Photoshop Digital Photography
Digital Photography Editing Software
Digital Photography Scrapbooking
Canon Digital Forum Photography
Digital Photography Background
Digital Photography With Fuji Cameras
Digital Camera Photography Tutorial
Digital Photography Camera
Better Digital Photography
History Of Digital Photography Timeline
Digital Fine Art Photography Workshops
Royalty Free Digital Stock Photography
Digital Photography Business
Digital Photography History
Art Digital Photography Education


Best Photography Camera Reviews Digital Cameras products



Main Photography Camera Reviews Digital Cameras sponsors

Photography Camera Reviews Digital Cameras

 

 

 

Welcome to Better Photos

 

Photography Camera Reviews Digital Cameras Article

This is a selection among article about Photography Camera Reviews Digital Cameras. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.

The Advantages Of Digital Photos And Digital Cameras

There is no debate that digital cameras are going to take over the photography market and with time we will see less and less film cameras sold and used. It is beneficial to take a moment and try to list the advantages of digital cameras and digital photos and put some order in why everybody likes them so much. In this article you will find that list.

Digital photos and digital cameras have many advantages and allow many new usages that were not possible with film. Here are a few:

Low photo cost: Photos taken with a digital camera literally cost nothing. The photos are kept in erasable memory and thus can always be discarded at no cost. Viewing the photos is immediate and does not cost anything (there is no film development cost). Also the photos you would like to keep can be copied to digital media such as a computer’s hard disk. With storage prices going down the cost of saving a photo on disk is practically zero.

The capacity: With ever growing storage capacities digital cameras today can hold hundreds and sometimes thousands of photos on a single media. You can always have a few more in your pocket and changing is very fast. The result is that a digital camera has practically infinite capacity. You can shoot as many photos as you want and at the end of the day just dump them on your computer’s disk. There is no time lost changing film and there is no photo opportunities lost due to lack of film or reserving film for later.

The feedback: One of the great advantages of digital cameras is instant feedback. Almost all digital cameras include a small LCD screen. Once a photo is shot you can go back and watch it on that screen. The ability to see how the photo looks like results in better photos. If the photo is not good you can take another one. Being able to see the photos on the spot results in an educated decision how to fix a photo or how to compose it better. It takes a lot of the guessing away from photography.

New shooting angles: With digital cameras you can take photos without your eye glued to the viewfinder. Overhead shots where you raise the camera over your head are much easier since you can still see what the camera is shooting by just looking up at its LCD screen. You are not limited anymore to angles where you can look through the viewfinder – you can shoot from any angle that the LCD is visible from. You can always shoot blindly like photographers used to do with film cameras.

Correcting photos: With digital cameras photos can be corrected using photo editing software. Some correction abilities are built-in the cameras but many more are available as software packages for your PC. Such corrections include red eye removal, contrast enhancements and more.

Changing conditions: With digital cameras the settings of the sensor can be changed instantly for each photo taken. With a click of a button the camera can be put in an indoor or outdoor mode, low light, night photography etc. Some cameras will automatically sense the scenario and set the sensor mode accordingly. This is literally like changing a roll of film to the optimized one for every photo you shoot – the best ISO, color features and more.

Longevity: Digital photos never lose their quality. A digital photo will be identical today and in 500 years. As long as you refresh the digital media every now and then and back it up your photos will literally last forever with no quality degradation. Digital photos do not turn yellow, they do not fold or get torn.

Ziv Haparnas is a technology veteran and writes about practical technology and science issues. This article can be reprinted and used as long as the resource box including the backlink is included. You can find more information about photo album printing and photography in general on www.printrates.com - a site dedicated to photo printing.

Article Source: http://EzineArticles.com/?expert=Ziv_Haparnas

Other Photography Camera Reviews Digital Cameras related resources


Photography Camera Reviews Digital Cameras News

HDR Expose 2.0 Review: Refined High-Dynamic-Range Image Creation - PCWorld


HDR Expose 2.0 Review: Refined High-Dynamic-Range Image Creation
PCWorld
High-dynamic-range photography can be a tricky process, and although some digital cameras have an HDR capture mode, ultimately you'll want to capture the images and combine them yourself for the ultimate in creative control.

and more »

Read more...


Olympus SH-25MR Digital Camera Review - Buy-n-Shoot.com (press release)


Buy-n-Shoot.com (press release)

Olympus SH-25MR Digital Camera Review
Buy-n-Shoot.com (press release)
This is a compact camera perfectly designed for the modern amateur photographer who wants it all: 16-megapixels, HD video, 12.5 x optical zoom (supported by a massive 25x 'super res' zoom), a 3-inch touch screen, GPS functionality, dozens of 'scene' ...
Review: Olympus OMD E-M5Sydney Morning Herald
Find something that clicksBrisbane Times
Plugged In: Olympus' savior camera proves worth the moneyThe Redoubtreporter
PC Advisor -The Age
all 30 news articles »

Read more...


Nikon Coolpix S9300 Review: Sleek and Slow - TechnoBuffalo


Nikon Coolpix S9300 Review: Sleek and Slow
TechnoBuffalo
By Mike Perlman on May 23, 2012 in Photography, Reviews Monitoring the Coolpix lineup closely over the last half decade, I've come to the conclusion that Nikon likes to stick to its guns. The Nikon Coolpix S9300 is nearly identical to its predecessors, ...

Read more...


Canon PowerShot SX260 HS Digital Camera Review - Buy-n-Shoot.com (press release)


Buy-n-Shoot.com (press release)

Canon PowerShot SX260 HS Digital Camera Review
Buy-n-Shoot.com (press release)
All the key functions are easily accessible from dials and buttons on the right of the camera and unlike cheaper, compact digital cameras the inclusion of a continuous, rolling navigation dial makes menu navigation sleek, professional and easy.

and more »

Read more...


Fujifilm FinePix SL300 Digital Camera Review - Buy-n-Shoot.com (press release)


Buy-n-Shoot.com (press release)

Fujifilm FinePix SL300 Digital Camera Review
Buy-n-Shoot.com (press release)
Buying a digital camera tends to involve the same process as buying a car. While some may believe that the purchase of a red car will be satisfactory, others may be more focused on the technical features such as engine size and power output.
FujiFilm FinePix HS30EXR, 30x Optical Zoom Camera ReviewGstyle magazine

all 4 news articles »

Read more...