They tried to sell me Canon SL1. Is it worth the hefty price tag? We take a look at the Cine, the high-end model in this series. The Nikon Z9 is the company's first camera to feature a stacked CMOS sensor, which brings a raft of new features, including blazing speed and autofocus performance to the Z lineup. Click through for our detailed first impressions of Nikon's latest professional ILC.
The Sony a7 IV is the fourth generation of the company's core a7 full-frame mirrorless camera model, and it's the most advanced yet. Click through for an in-depth look at Sony's latest full-frame mirrorless ILC. Nik Silver Efex Pro 3, one of the standout components of Nik Collection 4, is a black-and-white conversion tool that goes far further than the grayscale or black-and-white tools built into all-in-one photo apps.
For some users, this app alone might be worth the cost of the whole collection — find out for yourself in our review. The Nikon Z mm F2.
Get all the details in our full review. These capable cameras should be solid and well-built, have both speed and focus for capturing fast action and offer professional-level image quality.
Although a lot of people only upload images to Instagram from their smartphones, the app is much more than just a mobile photography platform. In this guide we've chosen a selection of cameras that make it easy to shoot compelling lifestyle images, ideal for sharing on social media.
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Submit a News Tip! Reading mode: Light Dark. Login Register. Best cameras and lenses. Started Apr 27, Discussions. With T4i discontinued should I still buy one if I can find one? Apr 27, Reply to thread Reply with quote Complain. Re: With T4i discontinued should I still buy one if I can find one? JohnInSoCal wrote: I went into bestbuy today to buy a t4i for my daughter and they pulled the remaining units they had from the shelves and are not going to sell them.
Reply Reply with quote Reply to thread Complain. So I guess my answer is yes, buy one if you find one. I would keep an eye out for some bargain D's as they will be selling them off somewhere. R2 -- hide signature R2D2's gear list: R2D2's gear list.
Jeff's gear list: Jeff's gear list. Anthony -- hide signature Timbukto's gear list: Timbukto's gear list. Canon doesn't say it's discontinued Hank's gear list: Hank's gear list. Jeff wrote: The only reason you might get the T5i is for the new mm STM lens but if you're going for the like I did it's a non-issue. Re: Canon doesn't say it's discontinued MontyCamera's gear list: MontyCamera's gear list.
Enjoy whatever you get! MontyCamera wrote: I was thinking of T2i. You have to ask if 5 FPS vs 3. Have to ask if ALL focus points are cross-type vs just the center is worth it. Have to ask if which is quite usable on the T4i is worth it.
They tried to sell me Canon SL1 Buy the t4i its a good camera. The T4i is a great camera. Same could be said about Sony sensors in Pentaxs, Nikons and Sonys bodies. Even though all three brands use the same sensor, Nikon's Expeed system handles the noise significantly better than Sony and Pentax. So the argument that the image quality is the same because its a the same sensor is not true.
Also be aware that the cameras will meter and AF differently too, thus even if you had the same sensor in the same position, each camera will produce different results. As has been mentioned - a used or refurbished T2i is one hell of a good value, or a T3i if you really value the flip screen I much prefer a loupe for video.
Approve the Cookies This website uses cookies to improve your user experience. By using this site, you agree to our use of cookies and our Privacy Policy. Register to forums Log in. Jun 20, 1. Permanent ban. LIKES 0. Jun 20, 2. Jun 21, 3. Jun 21, 4. Jun 21, 5. Jun 21, 6. Jun 21, 7. Jun 23, 8. Jun 23, 9. Jun 23, Madwrench Madwrench Senior Member. Jun 23, as a reply to imjason's post Madwrench wrote in post As has been mentioned - a used or refurbished T2i is one hell of a good value, or a T3i if you really value the flip screen I much prefer a loupe for video.
I suggest you don't use the default Auto Picture Style when shooting JPEG in low light, because it boosts the contrast and you really lose a lot of shadow detail. If you shoot raw, you've got latitude up to about ISO , but you'll end up applying a lot of luminance NR to get rid of the hot pixels. The T4i is capable of reasonably accurate color -- just not in its default Auto Picture Style setting. Auto pushes the contrast and saturation so that you lose detail in shadow areas and normally bright, saturated colors clip highlight detail.
That's why Canon offers four different non-special-effect color settings: Auto, Standard, Neutral, and Faithful. My normal Canon setting is Neutral with sharpening bumped up a couple notches, but at the very least dial it back to Standard, which is still better than Auto. It's pretty comparable to the A65, though I have to say I like the A65's tonality in bright light a little better I actually reviewed the SLT-A77V, which uses the same sensor and processing technology.
There's some color noise in blacks and on thin edges, but it delivers a nice range in the details. Performance Note: We recently updated our testing methodology to provide slightly more real-world performance, so the results aren't necessarily comparable with previous testing.
Until we're finished refining our procedures, we will not be posting comparative performance charts. Through the viewfinder -- i. In bright conditions, time to focus, expose and shoot was a solid 0.
In dim conditions, they're both 0. In contrast AF mode i. This is the only test I ran for the mm lens. Sequential shooting is similarly fast: 0. Burst performance results were interesting, in a disappoining way.
For a nonmoving subject but with center-point AF active, the T4i clocks about 5. However, with moving subjects -- in practice, that is -- it's far slower. In some cases it seemed to drop to roughly 2fps based on the file time stamps.
Accuracy, on the other hand, is very good, with roughly 75 percent of shots locking well enough for typical nonprofessional uses for panning, approaching, and random movements. The AF system seems to work fairly well with wide apertures on fast lenses, including the 50mm f1.
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