Sony have a new small interchangeable lens camera that's meant to be great. A7c. Probably outwith the budget though.
Very similar question - 13 year old has been asking for a "proper" camera for ages but I'm a complete ignoramus when it comes to these things. We're hoping to leverage the grandparents into buying and they're in the US, so not sure what to say about budget. She is, to put it politely, not the most careful child so robustness would be quite important.
I let a teenager loose with a canon sx220 hs.These cameras don't cost a lot second hand.Ok wide angle and zoom. Ok automatic functions.They can be modified with CDHK which gives a whole lot of control for not much money.The teenager discovered that they wanted to be able to quickly share pictures to social media (not easy from the camera, but others are easier).The teenager discovered that they liked seeing their good pictures on a big screen and this is different to sharing on social media.The teenager discovered aperture control. This led me to hand over the DSLRWhen I let the teenager use a DSLR, they chose not to take it out and reverted to phones camera use
All I want from a camera is a viewfinder, an aperture-priority mode, a decent wide angle, a sharp short tele and decent low-light capabilities. I haven't looked at cameras the last five-six years, but I don't imagine that the lenses has gotten much better, but the sensors must be a lot better than six years ago?Two lenses with focus lengths equivalent to 35 mm and 105mm on a small-format camera and with apertures around f/2.5 on a body with a sensor that can be pushed to 1600 ISO would be enough for 90% of all snaps I take.Sorry, very abstract answer.
The teenager discovered that they wanted to be able to quickly share pictures to social media (not easy from the camera, but others are easier).
...So even if you shoot RAW and use Lightroom etc you're still left having to get the jpeg back to your phone where Insta tells you 'could not load photo'. Fuck em.
The big thing that you get from a camera that you cannot get from a phone is optical zoom, but I'm sure this will be changing at some point
Quote from: lagerstarfish on November 25, 2020, 01:48:33 pmThe big thing that you get from a camera that you cannot get from a phone is optical zoom, but I'm sure this will be changing at some pointAnd depth of field effects (that come from manual aperture control)...
And depth of field effects (that come from manual aperture control)...
This. The camera companies have been absolutely asleep at the wheel on this, I haven't seen a camera yet where it is well implemented. My wife periodically wants to borrow a 'proper camera' only to start an argument when she can't get it off the thing. Now that Instagram is the prime image-sharing platform things are even worse - it only accepts uploads from a phone. So even if you shoot RAW and use Lightroom etc you're still left having to get the jpeg back to your phone where Insta tells you 'could not load photo'. Fuck em.