Table of Contents

digital SLR cameras

see also:

introduction

Why buy a dSLR?

There are some excellent reasons to buy a dSLR, but if none of these apply, perhaps you should be looking at mirrorless camera systems

  1. you aspire to be a enthusiast or a professional photographer and wish to either:
    1. build up a kit of professional lenses
    2. use certain lenses only available in dSLRs using their native functionalities eg. Canon 17mm tilt shift, Canon 85mm f/1.2 L, Canon MP-E65mm f/2.8 1-5x macro, Nikon 14-22mm f/2.8G, Nikon 85mm f/1.4G, full frame 24mm f/1.4, Olympus ZD 50-200mm f/2.8-3.5, Olympus ZD 150mm f/2.0, etc
  2. you want to use large lenses which would not be ergonomic on compact mirrorless camera systems
  3. you aspire to be a strobist and want to use remote TTL using PocketWizard radio remote controls (only available in Canon and Nikon)
  4. you need full camera control with 3rd party utilities (eg. astrophotography)
  5. you already have gear for that dSLR
  6. you want to capture fast moving subjects (mirrorless cameras and entry-level dSLRs are not great at this)
  7. you need to buy a full frame dSLR for lowest noise at high ISO, extra large prints, very shallow depth of field (DOF) or use wide angle tilt-shift lenses.
  8. you need equipment readily serviceable or available for rent nearly anywhere in the world (Canon or Nikon are particularly ubiquitous)
  9. you want to look like a pro and you don't mind carrying big, heavy equipment, learning the complexities of a dSLR, and the expectations placed upon you which go with possessing one.

which dSLR system?

full frame dSLRs

Canon

Nikon

Sony

cropped sensor dSLRs