Advanced digital camera suggestions?
Most of the pics that I take are hours of darkness shots of night lights, city lights and sunsets. I own a fujifilm finefix camera with 3600 ISO but it doesn't lug the quality pictures that I be hoping. My pics still turn out blurry and the lighting is not good.
I am looking at the ones that are similar to the digital SLR but that are still point and shoot. Best Buy call them Advanced Point and Shoot. Here is an example:
http://www.bestbuy.com/site/olspage.jsp?...
Can anyone give me some suggestions on ones you enjoy or someone you know? Or know of a good place that compares them?
Any relief would be appreciated
Answers: I agree with Anthony. You don't NEED to buy a tripod though. Any stationary reason will work. Find any object that's flat on top (rim of a trash can, your car's roof, picnic table, curb) and set your camera on it afterwards use the self timer to take the shot. With dozens of cameras, you should own at least one honourable one in at hand. Use the lowest ISO and no flash and see what happens. Also, the camera you coupled to can have such a huge zoom because it have a small sensor. I've been ecstatic with my Fujifilm Finepix F10 even though it's a compact camera because it have a larger sensor than most compact digital cameras. It's only $120 too. With your camera collection so big, you probably already own one.
here is a site for you to check
http://cnet.nytimes.com/html/ex/nytimes/...
it go through sections to dogmatic down what you needs are.
HEre is another one:
http://www.consumerreports.org/cro/index...
when flimsy is not good, the shutter break open longer and if you don't hold your camera steady enough, it will blur. use a tripod of capture a camera with figurine stabilise
high iso make photo noisy
The usual comparison places are http://www.imaging-resource.com and http://www.dpreview.com
In any skin, your mistakes are two:
1) you're apparently not using a tripod and
2) you're setting the ISO to an extreme high horizontal.
If you want good hours of darkness shots, even with your current camera, you're going to enjoy to get a tripod.
Next, you entail to keep the ISO low, to eat up image crash.
Hopefully your camera will be able to do a long (like up to 15 seconds) exposure or hold a manual setting allowing you to do exposures of several second.
Advanced point and shoots are nowhere near as apt as a digital SLR. They may have similar looking bodies, but the sensor inside is unbelievably small. This will make the metaphors much noisier than a digital SLR, particularly as you bump up the ISO at or above 400
Mostly though, it's not the camera features that make a darkness shot, as much as skill. From what you've described, getting an advanced point and shoot won't help you at adjectives, because you need to carry a tripod and shoot at a lower ISO. Before spending your money, try using your current camera with a tripod, low ISO and a long exposure. Frankly, if you're not content with the result, at that point, you should be looking to a digital SLR, to some extent than an SLR-looking camera with poor rite and a big lens on it.
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