So I got a nice hulking year-end bonus check from my consulting job ($1500) so I'm going to splurge for my birthday (Jan 17) and buy a DSLR. I have narrowed down my choices to the Nikon D3100 and the Canon t2i. Anyone here good with DSLR's (or have one they might want to brag about?) that could give some good input as to which to get (I'm leaning towards one but I won't say until I get some honest opinions). I'm going to put a placeholder for the pros and cons of each and I will fill them in as we discuss.
Nikon D3100Pros:- $539.99 (I've seen it on sale for this price) (Body + standard 18-55mm lens)
- 11 point auto-focus
- Auto-focusing video (albeit not perfect, but better than the t2i)
- 1 year body / 5 year lens warranty
Cons:- 14.2MP
- 1080P @ 24fps, 720P @ 30fps
- No External Mic Jack
- LCD Display = .23 megapixel
Canon t2iPros:- 17.9MP
- 1080P @ 24fps, 720P/480P @ 50fps
- External Mic Jack (doubt I'll use it)
- LCD Display = 1 megapixel (easier to tell if a picture is blurry or out of focus)
Cons:- $649.99 (Body + standard 18-55mm lens)
- 9 point auto-focus
- 1 year body / 1 year lens warranty
There's the technical comparison...Now here's the opinions I've been given accompanied by my own:
Nikon cameras are dependable, durable, excellent in low-light, and great for an amateur photographer who is just starting to delve into the photography world (I've been handicapped thus far by my Canon PowerShot A560 point-and-shoot camera). Nikon's guide mode is great for helping out when you can't remember what you needed to adjust and yet you can completely disregard it once you become comfortable. Canon's pictures can often be superior, but you'll probably end up reading the manual front to back and still forget most of it when you wish you could remember. The Nikon wins hands-down in the video category though.
Here's one of my favorite photos from my point-and-shoot. Just took it this past December at Longwood Gardens here in PA. There was a group of photography students (with their Nikons and Canons hehe) working on photographing this one tree. I popped up behind them and snapped this shot:
