SLR camera?

I am looking to buy a digital camera that is "SLR" for my wife who is a outset photographer...I would prefer something under $750 if at all possible but I dont really know much about these things...Any suggestions?


Answers:    Like stated above, your best bet is any the Nikon D40 or D40x, or the Canon EOS Digital Rebel XT/or XTi. I would even recommend the new Pentax Super.

Lets start sour with Canon. I would not recommend the Canon XT, the elder version of the XTi. The XT feel nothing smaller quantity than a cheap plasitic toy. In no way am I exagerating. The XTi, the newer performance, does a bit better on the quality of its body, but still, you can consistency the poor quality of an entry height Canon. Along with this, the utensils lens is absolute crap, as are most of the other lenses priced below $500. There are a few that are good that are below $500, but for best results, look at something in the L series.
Canon does own one good article going for it: The image talent. Thanks to its CMOS sensor, Canon has some of the best symbol quality contained by the business.
For Canon, I would really recomend the 40D, or the 5D, or something from the Mark series. But these range from $1,500 to $8,000, body individual.

Now for Nikon. Nikon makes a hugely good, solid camera body, range from the cheapest entry level DSLR to the peak priced model. This has held true decades ago next to film cameras, and it does so to this light of day.
The Nikon D40 and D40x that I mentioned are the best bang for your buck. Priced at merely $550 with a lens, the D40 have rock solid build, great layout, great features, great image talent, and an excellent LCD. For about $100 more, you can carry all this, but 10 mega pixels surrounded by the Nikon D40x. Though, I would only suggest this camera if you want the extra mega pixels for large prints or cropping.
Every camera have a problem, and with the D40/D40x, it is the certainty that they will only auto focus beside AF-S lenses. This means you cannot AF beside older Nikkors. They work without a flaw, you just cannot AF. This sounds similar to an awful thing that will surely save you from it, I know, but you must understand why Nikon did this. After doing abundant tests, Nikon fixed that for the D40/D40x the people most promising of buying these cameras were society moving up from digital point and shoot cameras, who do not have oodles, if any older Nikkors, and who do not plan to buy anymore. Basically a character who wants the trait of a DSLR, but who dont want to get contained by depth into photography. For this reason, the D40/D40x are marketing ace.
The two lenses that go next to the D40/D40x is the 18-55mm kit and the 55-200mm/VR. There are plentiful other AF-S Nikkors, but these cost well over a thousand dollars.

I mentioned Pentax as economically. Pentax is a great camera company as well. There lenses and bodies are timeless and point. They are not that well set for quality within the DSLR range, though. With the newer K series, this become very appearent. At first, it be the Pentax K110D, the K100D, and the K10D. The K110D and K100D were plagued next to problems such as internal problems and poor battery go; these cameras run on AA batteries. A few months after coming out, they removed the K110D from the lineup, and a bit latter, they "upgraded" the K100D to the Pentax Super. All in adjectives, the 10D has remained a miracle of a camera. There are no real problems beside this great camera.

So, I would recomend the Nikon D40 or D40x.

Hope this helps.
Canon Rebel XT, or the NIKON D40 are your best bets, although the price of the Rebel XTi seem to be crashing this holiday season to the tune of $699.00 for a 10MP at some places.

The Rat
Take a look at the new E-510 10-megapixel DSLR next to built-in image stabilization which neither the Canon Rebel or Nikon D80 have. It's also selectable to "vivid" colors which is the default setting for color on Nikon D40s and D80s. And the Olympus E-510 comes near an active CMOS LCD which is found one and only on the more expensive Nikon 200/300. The 2-lense kit for the Olympus E-510 offer an 18- 44 mm normal lense and a 45-200 mm telephoto lense, adjectives of which sells for around $686 [at samys.com]. And finally, the Olympus E-510 is smaller and lighter than any the Canon Rebel XTi or the Nikon D80. The Olympus also generates 10-bit RAW picture files [rather than 8-bits].

Good luck!
For a learner i would recommend going to a quality camera store and a moment ago having your wife try to navigate the menus and the user controls. I purely finished a film photography course and have a canon rebel t2 which worked wonderfully. I purely purchased the canon XT which will be good for me as i am not looking or need of a top of the line camera. Also as far as mega pixels travel generally the more the better, IF you are going to be enlarge or cropping and zooming following in photoshop or some other editing software. Other prudent id recommend buying a camera beside 6-8 mega pixels which will do just fine especially since she is only starting out.

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