He really seems to enjoy all these pictures being taken of him.
He did! My trick is not to say, "Look at me! Smile! Helloooo, look here!" I just let him do his thing. I also ask him to tell me about his favorite food or toy, so his face lights up. I ask him what we did at the park yesterday, etc.
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these pictures are taken with your Sx100? I need a new camera and I can't decide what I want.
Yes. I did a lot of research, looking for a camera that is as close to a DSLR as possible while being relatively small.
The two that fit the bill best were the S3 and G5, I think, but the G5 was too expensive, and the S3 was way too big, and with a removable lens cap which falls off all the time and can get lost.
So the 3rd choice was this one, and I LOVE it!
The lens is huge, and the zoom is bigger than most point and shoot cameras.
My only complaint is that in low light, it raises ISO too high, making the photos grainy. (Third photo from the bottom, for example.)
There are other ways to bring in more light into the camera, which would eliminate the graininess, but it automatically raises the ISO.
The lens is huge, and the zoom is bigger than most point and shoot cameras.
My only complaint is that in low light, it raises ISO too high, making the photos grainy. (Third photo from the bottom, for example.)
There are other ways to bring in more light into the camera, which would eliminate the graininess, but it automatically raises the ISO.
The lens is huge, and the zoom is bigger than most point and shoot cameras.
My only complaint is that in low light, it raises ISO too high, making the photos grainy. (Third photo from the bottom, for example.)
There are other ways to bring in more light into the camera, which would eliminate the graininess, but it automatically raises the ISO.
Even if you set the ISO to 200?
If you se your camera to P mode or any other "creative" mode, you can override the camera's setting for ISO.
The lens is huge, and the zoom is bigger than most point and shoot cameras.
My only complaint is that in low light, it raises ISO too high, making the photos grainy. (Third photo from the bottom, for example.)
There are other ways to bring in more light into the camera, which would eliminate the graininess, but it automatically raises the ISO.
Even if you set the ISO to 200?
If you se your camera to P mode or any other "creative" mode, you can override the camera's setting for ISO.
I use it on Av, but in order to start playing around with the lighting, you need TIME, which I don't have when catching the kids in the moment. You can lower it and find different ways to bring the light in. I've done that when time wasn't of essence. And if you move from one place to another, you'd need to change the settings for the new lighting. So it'd be very convenient to have it keep the ISO a little lower.
LilPrincess, she is so funny! Love the hand choreography. She's gotten big, too!
BTW, that glass table edge right near her head was getting me really nervous... LOL