To claim a FREE 24 page photo book visit canon.co.uk/hdbookoffer
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motionwerk to buz1962
6 Apr 176#4
You have 21 days to return it. They also matching lower prices within 7 days of a purchase.
All comments (41)
ElGofre
6 Apr 17#1
The 75-300mm is a pretty awful lens, I'd personally rather spend the cash on getting a better starting camera and save for a better tele lens at a later date, but if you want a DSLR + tele lens combo without a huge amount of investment, then this is about as cheap as you can get. The photo book is icing on the cake, so heat from me.
money.monster
6 Apr 17#2
It's even cheaper with lens 18-55 which might be more useful for fashion and portrait use over a telephoto lens. Heat added either way.
This deal includes the 18-55 as well as the 75-300. It's a good price for the two lens combo, however, these versions of the lenses do not have Image Stabilisation (IS), and the 75-300 (as others have said) is a fairly poor lens.
I'd personally recommend the version of the 1300D with the 18-55 IS lens from Amazon for £319, and then saving up for the far better 55-250 IS telephoto lens, which can be had for around £125. the total of £444 is nearly £100 more than this deal, but the lenses with IS will give significantly better results.
buz1962
6 Apr 17#3
typical I bought this very package from Currys at the weekend for £420!
motionwerk to buz1962
6 Apr 176#4
You have 21 days to return it. They also matching lower prices within 7 days of a purchase.
sefgrt123 to buz1962
6 Apr 17#11
You have 7 days to get the difference refunded. I used to work there. Make sure you go before the 7 days is up.
FRZ
6 Apr 171#6
I want to get into photography, what's a good kit to start with?
NeoTrix to FRZ
6 Apr 17#7
At this price, I'd probably go for it. I have a Nikon 3300 that I paid about £300 for last year, but if buying one now, would consider this one for sure
K1664 to FRZ
6 Apr 17#26
I'd go for the Nikon D3300 which is a much better camera. You can start on the automated modes then switch to manual settings as your skills progress. This camera will produce amazing results, should grow with you for the next 3-5 years allowing you to upgrade to something like a Nikon D500 or whatever its replacement is. It used to be a close run thing between Nikon and Canon but in the last couple of years Nikon has really started to excel from the competition.
OrribleHarry
6 Apr 17#8
I know very little about cameras but I'm looking for one with really high dynamic range, anyone able to confirm if this is this suitable for filming a brightly lit stage from a dark seating area?
When I'm filming (videos) of my daughter dancing on stage my current camera shows the videos with her excessively bright and washed out.
If this camera is not suitable then could someone recommend an alternative? Ideally a bridge camera.
somersetpaul to OrribleHarry
6 Apr 171#10
Ideally you need a camera with spot metering so you can set the correct exposure for your daughter on stage. Any DSLR offers this. HDR is only necessary if you also want good shadow detail in the audience. Personally I would just let the audience become silhouettes. If you don't want to invest in a DSLR just chose a camera with exposure compensation. Most cameras expose for the whole scene in auto mode which is why bright central objects become over exposed, it is a simple matter just to dial the exposure back a bit if your camera allows. A bridge camera with manual controls would be good for you as it will have good telephoto reach. I have a Canon SX530, but the newer Canon SX540 is on offer at Currys and should do the job even better.
There are 3 main causes of blurred photos. (1) Incorrect focus, IS doesn't help with this, (2) Subject Movement, IS won't help with this either, (3) Camera movement - this is the one that IS can help with.
IS (Image Stabilisation) is a feature that attempts to compensate for camera movement, it means that you can take acceptable hand-held pictures at slower shutter speeds than a non-IS system. It's especially useful for telephoto lenses, such as the 75-300mm or 55-250mm lenses mentioned in this thread, but can be helpful in low-light with shorter focal length lenses such as the 18-55mm kit lens. It's important to realise that it doesn't help with subject movement though.
whatsthematter
6 Apr 17#13
I bought this camera due to it's small size, with a prime lens it fits in a coat pocket (best camera is the one you have on you).
It's got the main feature i want; changing the aperture. A flip screen would be nice, bit it would increase the size.
C0mm0n_Sense to whatsthematter
6 Apr 17#24
I'm a bit of noob with cameras, a flip screen seems to be very sought after, but the camera already has a screen and can be paired with a smartphone as a remote screen which would seem to perform the same tasks as a flip screen, unless there's more to flip screens than i understand.
Would be grateful if someone could explain.
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http://www.currys.co.uk/gbuk/cameras-and-camcorders/digital-cameras/dslr-and-compact-system-cameras/canon-eos-1300d-dslr-camera-with-18-55-mm-f-3-5-5-6-lens-black-10144243-pdt.html#srcid=11026
I'd personally recommend the version of the 1300D with the 18-55 IS lens from Amazon for £319, and then saving up for the far better 55-250 IS telephoto lens, which can be had for around £125. the total of £444 is nearly £100 more than this deal, but the lenses with IS will give significantly better results.
When I'm filming (videos) of my daughter dancing on stage my current camera shows the videos with her excessively bright and washed out.
If this camera is not suitable then could someone recommend an alternative? Ideally a bridge camera.
IS (Image Stabilisation) is a feature that attempts to compensate for camera movement, it means that you can take acceptable hand-held pictures at slower shutter speeds than a non-IS system. It's especially useful for telephoto lenses, such as the 75-300mm or 55-250mm lenses mentioned in this thread, but can be helpful in low-light with shorter focal length lenses such as the 18-55mm kit lens. It's important to realise that it doesn't help with subject movement though.
It's got the main feature i want; changing the aperture. A flip screen would be nice, bit it would increase the size.
Would be grateful if someone could explain.