colorado springs wedding photographer

(Let’s pretend it’s still Tuesday.)  :)

The most common questions in my inbox these days center around our switch from Canon equipment to Nikon gear.

Our Canon sell-off has prompted a fresh round of email questions, so I thought I’d better tackle it here!

The most common question: Why did we switch?

First off, let me just say that I’m not a proponent of switching camera systems.  It costs money and time, and I believe that eventually whatever you’re coveting in the one brand will be adopted by the other.  When we bought our first Canon DSLR, it was with the thought that we would be Canon people for life.

However, when we bought into the Canon system, it was as amateurs.  We liked Canon’s commitment to its middle range products.  We were buying into it with different needs.

We began considering a switch to Nikon the day the 5dmkII was announced.  (And we were not alone–a lot of wedding photographers jumped ship in the days after announcement.)  The features Canon chose to add to the 5d seemed to solidify that commitment to its middle range and pull the 5d farther away from the pro side of “prosumer.”

What ticked me off about the 5dmkII?

– The larger files.  The files from the mkII are twice as large as the files coming off the original 5d. This means twice the number (or size) of memory cards, twice the hard drive space, and most importantly, everything I want to do on the computer (from opening the file to saving it) takes twice as long.  If I was in the poster business, this might interest me.  However, my clients rarely order or print anything larger than an 8×10.  A 12 mp camera is plenty.  Anything bigger just adds expense and time.

– The video capability.  Don’t get me wrong–a lot of photographers are excited about this.  I’m just not one of them.  I have no desire to be a videographer–I just want to be an awesome still photographer.  I don’t like paying for a capability that I don’t need, and it irritated me that Canon was putting energy into something that seemed largely billed at the consumer level (making it easier to sell them a more expensive camera if it can also be justified as the family video camera) and not at pro photographers whose business is still photography.

– No innovation in the auto-focus.  Some photographers who have received the mkII in the last few weeks have said that they notice an improvement, some say that they don’t notice a difference, but according to the specs and press releases, there was no major auto-focus revamp, and this is something I’d been looking for them to do.

– There are other minor things that annoy me, like the new battery (more expensive and not compatible with the 20/30/5d batteries that we already had in spades), battery grip (which doesn’t take an extra battery like the old 5d grip) (luckily, this isn’t true–the initial press release said it took one battery, but the product descriptions now say it loads one or two, so I have nothing to complain about there :D ), and the lackluster high ISO performance.

We decided to hold off and wait to switch until the 5dmkII began shipping and we could hear a bunch of independent reviews and find out if the 5dmkII ISO performance could compare to the D3 and D700 (the official word is that the D3 and D700 are better, though by a small margin).

We spent a lot of time talking about it, and pricing out what a switch would cost us both in terms of real dollars and opportunity cost (we were due camera upgrades anyway),  and one day in October I realized that even if the ISO performance turned out to be great, it didn’t change my autofocus disappointment, the giant files, or the overall feeling that Canon was aiming the 5d farther away from their pro cameras (the 1d and 1ds).

As hobbiests, we had plenty of time to wait for the advantages of each system to even out over time.  But as a pro, I didn’t want to wait for Canon to boost their autofocus to Nikon’s level.  Nic argued that we’d made plenty of money off the equipment and could well justify the relatively low opportunity cost of the switch.

So we gave Nikon a try.  I got the D3, the SB-900 flash and the 70-200 f/2.8 VR lens.  Then added the 85mm f/1.4.  After shooting Belinda and Justin’s wedding with the D3, I was sold.  It’s not a perfect system (I definitely have my complaints, which I’ll get into next week), but for shooting weddings, I can’t see ever going back.  If I only shot portraits, I would want to be with Canon.  But for weddings, I need that extra Nikon ruggedness and auto-focus reliability.

Coming next week, my thoughts about Nikon vs. Canon.  And don’t worry, it’s not all glowy Nikon love.  :)

Posted in Photographer Tips

 

We made the official switch to Nikon last month and I have been selling the Canon gear off in fits and spurts.  It’s time to get serious and get the rest of this stuff out of my house, though.  I’ll be adding pictures this week, but wanted to get the list out first (to be totally honest, product photography is not my forte and I’m hoping most of these will sell before I have to take them out of their boxes and actually photograph them).

Unless otherwise mentioned, all items are in like new condition with their original boxes (many boxes have had their UPC barcodes cut out).

All lenses are USA (not gray market) lenses.  The L series lenses have all been protected with UV filters (however the filters are staying with me).

Prices include shipping.

Lighting

580 EX (includes box but not case or the little foot stand, has velcro attached for use with radiopoppers) – $265

Gary Fong Lightsphere (opaque and for the 580EX [not EXII].  no packaging.) – $20

Battery pack for Canon flashes (these increase the recycle time of the flash incredibly–I wouldn’t shoot a wedding without one)  – $120

Battery pack for Canon flashes – $120

Lenses

50mm f/2.5 macro (6 months left on warranty)- $200

24-70 f/2.8 L ( 7 months left on warranty) – $1050

24-70 f/2.8L (no box, scuff marks on lens hood) – $800

135 f/2.0 L (scuff marks on lens hood, 4 months left on warranty) – $820

70-200 f/2.8 L IS (it kills me to sell this one) – $1450

Cameras

5d with battery grip + extra battery (just came back from a tune-up at Canon, 14 months old, only noticeable wear is on the mount for the flash [where there’s that usual paint chipping]) -$1300

20d (3 years old, still works great–great as a back-up camera or for a first time DSLR user–the way the controls are laid out it’s easier to learn how to shoot in manual on the 10/20/30/40/50ds than on a Rebel) – $300

30d + extra battery (bought refurbished from Canon 7 months old, has 13 months left on warranty) – $450

If you have questions or want to purchase something, you can use the contact form (in the menu bar) or email me at traci @ realphotography.com (remove the spaces)

Posted in NewsPhotographer Tips

 

I got to meet baby Marley on Sunday.  She made it as a 2008 baby by just a hair–she was born on 9:30pm New Year’s Eve!  That made her four days old at our shoot, so we were able to a bunch of different things in a short time span.  She was just sleeping no matter how we wiggled her or wrapped her or moved her around!  I know I say it a lot, but getting the newborns in to their session before they are a week old makes a world of difference in the quality and ease of the shoot!

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I’m in love with her.

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But so is Will.

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(Marley’s big sister Taylor is BFFs with Will, so we did the shoot here at the house and I didn’t send Will off with Nic, because we thought that Taylor and Will could play together.  Except Will took one look at Marley and decided she was the new girl for him. )  I can’t really blame him.  Marley is one cute baby!

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Like my new Thunder Gray backdrop paper?  It’s so hot right now.  (Seriously, it’s pretty much the Hansel of the photography world.)

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Taylor is a cute big sister and color AND black and white.  I can’t decide, so I’m showing both.  :)

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Keith and Heather with their new bundle!

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Heather is such a beautiful momma!

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***

Want to see more behind-the-scenes shots?  Like how Will went and sat down next to Taylor as we got her all situated?  Cause who doesn’t need a dragon in their Sisters Shot?

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My total favorite:

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(I’d been trying to get Taylor to stand behind Heather and give her a hug.  Will had apparently been watching and listening from the sidelines, because as we tried to convince Taylor that getting a family photo was more interesting than Will’s toy workbench, Will inserted himself into the shot.  Keith’s face is totally priceless!)

And my two favorite “woe is me–photoshoots are hard” poses from Marley…

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Posted in Baby Photographer