The only advantage of a bridge camera is they are big enough to make people stand still for a bit in the belief that you're a proper photographer.Seconded. Photographer is indeed the most important, but most of us haven't a clue.
I have an old 'Fuji' S9500 'bridge' camera (didn't realise it was a bridge until tonight), which is bascially a compact but it is the same size as a DSLR. It can be fully automatic, or indeed manual.
Get it right and it can take some fantastic photo's. They have a much better lense than a compact, but you lose the compact size. DSLR if you want the ability to change lenses and get more creative. My camera is better than me. Even though it's old, it's fast, takes great pics (only 9 megapixels - enough) but it is bulky. It is still point and shoot.
All this crap about phone cams having xxx megapixels, maybe, but the lense is crap and tiny.
P.S. See my photo website here: www.flickr.com/semi-detached and I challenge you to tell me (without checking) which shots are made with a phone and which with an SLR :-)
And there is also Pentax if you want a good oneFor DSLR, whole range of Nikons and Canons. ....
Nice photostream!
I know you could have done it in post-processing (although I've checked and you haven't) but to me it's obvious the cobbles are taken with a dSLR because of the way the focus fades away - and the out of focus buildings in the 'Je suis Charlie' pictures are also a give away.
Cobbles on the shore...(sunshine on Leith) by Semi-detached, on Flickr
Holding up the pen - #jesuischarlie by Semi-detached, on Flickr
Compact cameras or phones that give you the control over exposure to do this are few and far between
Angel fire on the beach by Semi-detached, on Flickr
And there is something about this one that says 'phone' to me - it might just be the instagram filter, but I think it's in the way the sharpness falls off so dramatically from the centre.
Frozen comb by Semi-detached, on Flickr
(I only looked at the EXIF after I'd decided which were which - I didn't get any wrong, but there are a large number where I wouldn't be prepared to say either way, so for a lot of shots you are correct - certainly for the size of image shown in the flickr photostream)
Some lovely, wonderful, beautiful pics there, @Melvil - thanks.![]()
Mind you, there are plenty of people in Venice already with cameras, and what makes you think you'd do a better job than them lol?
Nice website.
There is plenty of anecdotal evidence about the controllability of dslrs, on the other hand I find the array of buttons no less bewildering than digital menus or post processing, to put it another way these are the tools of the 21 century and I feel it's ludditism to insist in the manual side of slrs when there is as much, if a different, skillset in the digital arts.
I have lost as many shots through pressing the wrong combo on my slr, as I have through misnavigating my compact.
...there are a vast amount of post-processing choices in Photoshop and Lightroom and that's half the fun, isn't it. Some pictures, with a few minutes of fiddling, just start to really pop in a way that you wouldn't have thought while taking them.
And that's where the ability to shoot RAW is priceless - again, not a feature many phones or compacts have.