A digital camera stores the information from its image sensor as a collection of thousands of pixels, or tiny dots, in a digital file. (This file usually is on a memory card inside the camera.) A group of a million pixels is called a megapixel, & megapixel counts are normally used as a camera spec. A 16-megapixel camera is one that captures 16 million pixels in every image. Most often you want as many megapixels as you can afford.
Producing big prints requires a large megapixel count.
The kind of images you capture are a derivative of the type of lenses. The sensor also matters, as well. A bigger sensor captures more detail than the smaller one, even if they have the same number of megapixels. Settings and functional design are of consequence as well in deciding how much you will appreciate a camera.
Different Types Of Digital Cameras
Point-and-shoots, superzoom point-and-shoots, waterproof point-and-shoots, advanced point-and-shoots, mirrorless cameras, and SLRs. All point-and-shoots, whether basic or advanced, are defined as having their lenses built into the camera—they can't be switched out. Mirrorless cameras and SLRs have interchangeable lenses.
What Is Next?
Once you decide the type of camera you want and the number of megapixels you need.
If you're planning to shoot video with the camera, consider the video quality. You want models that respond the quickest when you depress the shutter button. Also, start-up time and shutter delay for the first and subsequent shots.
No comments:
Post a Comment