Friday, May 23, 2008

Get some accessories

by Philip Greenspun; revised April 2007

Big digital SLR cameras take not-so-very-compact Compact Flash (CF) memory cards. Often the camera body does not come with a CF card or the supplied card will only hold a handful of images. A RAW photo from an 8-megapixel digital SLR occupies roughly 10 MB of space on the card, which means that a 2 GB card will hold approximately 200 images. The RAW files from the Canon EOS-5D are approximately 13 MB in size, which means that you can get 300 images on a 4 GB card. In addition to the size of the card, it is worth looking at the maximum writing speed. A card labeled "60X", for example, can theoretically read or write 9 MB per second or one RAW 8-megapixel image per second (folks who've measured the write times of various cards in real cameras never get more than 6 MB per second, even from cards that are supposed to support 20 MB per second). The camera has a memory buffer allowing you to capture 20 or more images in rapid sequence, and then it writes them to disk as fast as the card allows. Even with a large buffer, however, you want a fast card so that the camera is responsive to requests to review recently captured images. You don't want to leave your subjects standing around for two minutes while the camera writes to the card and then you figure out whether you've gotten the images that you need. The SanDisk Ultra II cards are nearly as fast as the fastest available cards and nearly as cheap as the cheapest available cards. Don't pay extra for Lexar "write-acceleration" cards if you're using a Canon body; Canon doesn't support whatever these cards need to write faster. You can buy Sandisk cards at Amazon.com: 8 GB; 4 GB; 2 GB; 1 GB. Serious photographers don't generally use cases for SLRs. If you're out taking pictures, you want the camera available for immediate use. If you're not taking pictures, you can stuff the camera anywhere. If you are going to be taking the camera out in the rain, however, or tossing it into a backpack with a lot of rocks, I like the Zing neoprene "action covers".

A "UV haze" filter, appropriately sized to fit the front of your lens, can be useful if you're taking pictures in a dusty or wet environment or if you're lending your camera to a careless person. For maximum contrast and image quality, however, don't leave the filter on the lens when doing a project in a clean environment.

As far as cleaning accessories go, the most useful is a microfiber cloth. Remember to drip the cleaning fluid onto the cloth and then wipe the lens; do not drip cleaning fluid directly onto a lens. Also never try to clean an SLR mirror yourself. Dust on the mirror will not appear on your images and it is very easy to damage the mirror surface. Zeiss makes some good lens cleaning products (buy a kit from amazon), including their pre-moistened wipes.

Where to Buy

In the old days you saved a lot of money by buying camera equipment from one of the big New York City retailers. These days, however, prices for digital cameras are about the same all over the Web. You'll get about as good a deal at amazon.com as anywhere else, sometimes better. The main problem with buying digital SLR cameras and digital camera lenses at a non-specialty store is that they won't have the serious lenses. You'll be able to get the cheap popular zooms but not the prime lenses, the professional-quality zooms, or unusual accessories.

Get some knowledge

Please take a moment to read this article on photographic light (written for the film era but still valuable). Read the owner's manual that came with your camera a couple of times.

Taken from http://photo.net

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