Wednesday, November 7, 2007

Digital Camera Accessories - The Top 7 Accessories You Cant Live

Author: Mike Singh

Article:
The anticipation of buying some digital camera accessories is
just about as exciting as buying the camera itself. With so many
trimmings to go with it, the digital camera will turn a simple
hobby into a pleasurable profession with just a snap of the
finger. When we begin looking at the digital camera of choice,
we need to look at some of the accessories that will go with it.
Some accessories will go with most cameras but some may be brand
specific, so stay with the brand of the camera if you can when
looking at their extras.

Accessories such as rechargeable batteries, a battery charger/AC
adapter, memory card, soft camera case, camera bag, lens
cleaning kit, tripod, external flash and filters, will all make
the digital camera run more smoothly and efficiently. They add
value to your photo shoots, and also increase the life of your
camera. The worst thing in the world is to be out on a shoot,
and have the battery go out or the memory card malfunctions.

There are some accessories more important than others, and some
simply sell better than others. Right now, at the top of the
accessory list for digital cameras are: (1) camera bags - for
LCD scratches, general marks on the camera, with the Lowepor
Micro Trekker 200 and the Lowepro Mini Trekker Classic as the
two top selling bags; (2) memory cards - it is best to have one
large card or a couple medium card.

(3) camera tripod - only purchase one of you are serious about
photography; (4) photo printer - some of the best ones are the
Canon i70/i80/i90 Portable Photo Printer, HP Photosmart 375
Photo Inkjet Printer, Epson PictureMate Personal Photo Lab
Inkjet Printer, Kodak EasyShare Dock Plus Dye Sublimation
Printer, and the Sony DFF-FP50 Digital Photo Inkjet Printer; and
(5) Portable Storage Device and Card Reader - holds 7 memory
card types and stores up to 100 GB of images; (6) photo editing
software - always upgrade to a more advanced program; and (7)
Digital Picture Frame - displays slide shows and receives photos
across country.

One of the most important accessories, which really is a
necessity, should be a lens cleaning kit to go along with the
digital camera. You should never clean any optics of your camera
using your shirt, fingers, water or breath. The kit, which costs
a few dollars, includes a small blower brush, a soft cloth, a
small plastic bottle containing the lens cleaning solution, and
a number of lens cleaning tissues. Little specks of dirt on a
photograph or smudges will cost a person time when they editing
them out.

Digital cameras and their built-in flashes have a limited range
of approximately ten feet, which is considered normal for most
point-and-shoot cameras. This distance can be increased 18 feet
on up to 40 feet, depending on the flash used as a slave flash,
which is ANY photographic flash that has a sensor built into the
unit. Many of these are sensitive enough to be activated 100
feet away in full sunlight, but are not restricted to outdoor
use only.

Some of the new digital cameras that have "red eye reduction",
also called pre-flash, require a special digital flash unit to
act as a slave unit. But the older digital cameras without
pre-flash will still work with slave units. But the first thing
was to purchase a camera with at least 2X on up to an 8X optical
zoom - not digital. Optical is the highest quality digital
camera available, as the digital will take blurry photographs.

Another very important accessory is a tripod, for those of us
who have the shakes and an unsteady hand. The tripod is needed
to prevent camera shake, especially when the shutter speed drops
below 1/60 second at a wide angle shot. Some digital cameras are
equipped with an LCD monitor, which flashes a blinking light as
a warning when the shutter speed is likely to cause a camera
shake.

Also, a tripod is necessary when the photographer is too close
to the object in macro photography. There are mini tripods and
the regular tripods, with the minis pretty popular anymore as
they are lightweight and can be stored easily.

Almost all digital cameras come with a small starter memory
card, 16 or 32 MB. However, a professional photographer or a
shutterbug may need a larger memory card - the more pictures on
it, the faster it will disappear in room. A larger card will
have more room so more pictures can be taken; we won't need to
rush to our computer to transfer them off the memory card before
we run out of room. We also have the option of using several
small memory cards, sorted out per subject or job.

And last but not least, a battery charger or an AC adapter is
very much needed, unless we keep a case of batteries on us at
all times. But the battery charger is the number one choice as
it allows us to continue charging spare batteries without
interrupting our shooting. In the case of an AC adapter, the
shooting will come to a halt while the battery is being charged.

It is also advisable to buy a spare set of rechargeable
batteries as it saves us the embarrassment of getting stuck with
drained out batteries during the middle of a photo shoot.
Rechargeable batteries last longer, and will save us the bother
of hunting for battery stores in desolate places. The price may
be high at first, but it is better than losing a photography job
or driving all the way to a camera store to repurchase what was
forgotten in the first place!

About the author:
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1 comment:

Anonymous said...

Good for people to know.

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