Pretty much. |
I had a problem with taking too many pictures back in the days of 35mm film, and used to pay out the ass for film back in my my college and Peace Corps days. Fortunately I was able to develop them for free back in college, as I worked in a store that had a photo lab and I'd sneak my film in on the queue, and in Ghana their film developers charged about 80 cents to print off double prints.
Damn, I miss Africa.
Anyway, since digital photography has decimated the need to purchase film rolls and pay - even if a little - money to develop them, my picture-taking has gotten much, much worse. Where I used to be that annoying person with a camera in someone's face for no reason whatsoever, now I'm the annoying person with a camera in someone's face for no reason whatsoever taking upwards of 45 pictures. Not that I keep all 45 pictures, mind you - I generally like to take an obnoxious amount and then whittle them down, deleting all the poorly-lit, blurry shots and keeping a 'master set'... which, if we're using '45' as the original number, would probably end up being something like 20 - 25.
My wife hates it, sure enough, but I'd rather take too many pictures and miss nothing rather than look cool and take a few pictures, thereby missing out on sheer awesomeness.
You feel me, America? Damn right you do.
Canon Rebel XT |
Canon PowerShot ELPH 300hs |
I was gnashing my teeth for twelve months.
Then, we processed our 2013 income taxes and bought ourselves a replacement. FINALLY.
Behold - the Canon EOS Rebel T4i 18.0MP CMOS SLR:
An upgrade from their famous T3i model, the T4i features some new settings that allow you to capture better light in dark settings without getting that whole 'blurred to shit' thing, while at the same time avoid over-powering flashes. I could write up a whole review of the thing, but I guess if you're that interested you could just check it out here for yourself. |
. . . and it also does this. Which is also pretty cool. |
The snap-away feature is actually pretty cool with this case - it allows for you to keep the screw-on base cover attached without having to keep the lens cover hanging out off the camera. . . |
- Brian
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