Your Guide To Buying A Digital Camera
By Thad Pickering
Almost everyone agrees that digital cameras offer plenty of
advantages over film cameras, and consumers are voting with
their wallets as they continue to buy digital cameras in
record numbers. Some of the advantages of digital cameras
over their film counterparts is the ability to immediately
see the images you have taken instead of waiting to have
film developed first, and also being able to transfer your
image files to your computer where you can edit, print and
store them as you see fit. But what should you look for
when buying a digital camera?
Well, first of all decide how you plan on using the prints
that you will make. Will they mostly be 4 X 6 snapshots, or
do you plan on making enlargements on up to 11 X 14 or so?
This will determine how much resolution that you need to
buy when you get your digital camera. For snapshots, a 4 -6
megapixel camera should do the job just fine, but if you
want to make larger prints you may want to look for a 6 - 8
megapixel camera instead. And if you plan on doing lots of
photo editing that can involve zooming in and cropping a
small portion of the image, you may even want a 10+
megapixel camera for that kind of heavy duty work.
Most fixed lens digital cameras come with a zoom feature,
but you should know that there are two different types of
zooms that are used. One is an optical zoom that relies on
the lens for it's magnification, and the other is the
digital zoom that enlarges the image already captured by
digital means instead. The optical zoom is far more
preferable than the digital zoom as it will produce sharp
and clear zoom shots throughout it's entire focal range.
The digital zoom is only magnifying the resulting image and
so it can produce less sharp, grainy pictures instead when
used at the higher end of the focal range. So try to get a
camera that has as much of the zoom range that you want
being handled by the optical rather than the digital zoom.
If having the best image quality is important to you then
you want to look for digital cameras that save their files
in TIFF, GIF and RAW formats as these do not sacrifice any
image quality when compressing the image file for storage.
On the other hand, the JPEG image format that many cameras
use will cause some loss of image quality in the file
compression part of saving the image file.
When deciding what digital camera to buy, much of your
decision will revolve around how you plan to use the camera
and the resultant image files, and what features are most
important to you and the way you shoot your photos. The
tips given above should help you though to be more informed
about how to select the digital camera that fits your photo
style best.
Thad Pickering writes on many consumer related topics
including digital photography. You can find top selling
digital cameras and cannon digital cameras by visiting our
Digital Photography website.