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Chaz Registered: Mar 20, 2004 Total Posts: 370 Country: United States |
My wife's birthday is next week. She currently shoots with a D200 and has a wedding assignment in June. |
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BenV Registered: Jan 01, 2008 Total Posts: 1883 Country: United States |
Same old card and roses, and get you a D3 :-0 |
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James R Registered: Feb 25, 2006 Total Posts: 1587 Country: United States |
I have never been big on D-Lighting, but, the improved high-ISO performance, AF system, and Picture Control Setting (including the ability to add D2X modes) make this a good upgrade. |
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Mark Kenfield Registered: Aug 25, 2007 Total Posts: 543 Country: Australia |
For wedding photography I don't think she's going to notice much of a difference between the two. An SB-800 (or two) on the other hand, could make a substantial difference to the number of keepers she gets. If she's already got one, then perhaps some nice fast glass. |
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Andre Labonte Registered: Dec 21, 2005 Total Posts: 5276 Country: United States |
James R wrote: |
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chemprof Registered: Jan 12, 2004 Total Posts: 3925 Country: United States |
We've been through this before recently. You might want to check the archives. Longish thread. |
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Chaz Registered: Mar 20, 2004 Total Posts: 370 Country: United States |
BenV - I'm with you but the wife won't buy it. She knows I'm waiting to see how the expected D3X announcement shakes out as an upgrade from my current D2X. |
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Chaz Registered: Mar 20, 2004 Total Posts: 370 Country: United States |
Mark, Andre, chemprof - Thanks for the input. She'll be using one or more SB-800s and between us we have fast glass as well. |
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RONIN2 Registered: Aug 08, 2006 Total Posts: 173 Country: Canada |
Mark Kenfield wrote: |
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Mark Kenfield Registered: Aug 25, 2007 Total Posts: 543 Country: Australia |
RONIN2 wrote: |
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Andre Labonte Registered: Dec 21, 2005 Total Posts: 5276 Country: United States |
Chaz wrote: |
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louis fusco Registered: Nov 18, 2005 Total Posts: 2887 Country: Ireland |
for the extra control for jpegs i should think so. but you may find a custom curve in the d200 might help too. |
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chemprof Registered: Jan 12, 2004 Total Posts: 3925 Country: United States |
I never shoot jpg. No reason to give up ultimate quality with the latest cameras. Plenty of speed in RAW. |
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Soupdragon Registered: Mar 25, 2008 Total Posts: 204 Country: United Kingdom |
chemprof wrote: |
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Chaz Registered: Mar 20, 2004 Total Posts: 370 Country: United States |
Thanks to all for the replies. The new unit is now in the car awaiting gift wrapping. |
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Lunco Registered: May 06, 2008 Total Posts: 6 Country: Slovenia |
You can still tweak on-board settings for raws can't you? And then develop them in some program like Aperture or Adobe Lightroom, it doesn't require any fiddling with the images, except exporting them. It will save some space if you just shoot RAW |
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tuannie Registered: Apr 10, 2004 Total Posts: 4406 Country: United States |
Mark Kenfield wrote: |
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RONIN2 Registered: Aug 08, 2006 Total Posts: 173 Country: Canada |
Mark Kenfield wrote: |
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snegron Registered: Apr 13, 2005 Total Posts: 2284 Country: United States |
I am curious to know how this thread concludes. I currently shoot weddings with a pair of D200's and I will be the first to admit that the noise at just about every ISO setting is a nuisance. Skin tones, however, are very accurate. Same thing applies to my old D1X's I used to use. The only two major reasons I decided to shoot with D200's instead of D1X's were because of better flash and bigger files to crop better with the D200's. I have heard that the D300 is much better than the D200 in terms of noise, but I heard the same song and dance about the D200 when it was first released and how the files were supposed to be almost noise free compared to older cameras like the D1X and D70s. I see the same amount of noise in all the old cameras I mentioned, (including the D200) and I would get a D300 immediately if I knew that there was a very significant improvement in the noise department. |