Buying a dSLR: Tip #2
Tuesday, May 6th, 2008Tip #2: It’s not the camera, it’s you.
There is no direct relationship between what kind of camera you own and the success of your photos. You could trade a brand spankin’ new Bugatti for state of the art, bleeding edge professional photo equipment, and still get bad photos.
There are famous artists whose outstanding works are studied in art majors, although they never owned anything than a basic film camera with a manual 50mm lens; yet they took brilliant photos with it.
(Actually, one of the stages of a learning photographer is to stick to a single lens for a while and see what he or she can make out of it, to learn to SEE and use what is available.)
Having a piece of high performance technology in your hand helps you make better decisions, but doesn’t do the thinking and seeing for you. Ultimately it’s you who takes the picture and have to get everything right. You are the one who must see something worth photographing, and think about composition and light. The camera just takes the shot.
It really makes no difference if you’ve got a camera phone or the most praised camera of the year if you continue to make the most common mistakes of amateur photographers. Fine, I’ll admit it - that great dSLR camera you had your eyes on will show much sharper and in more vibrant colors your poorly framed and composed, badly timed, wrongly focused shot. Although the outcome may be technologically better, the photo is still crap and not worth displaying even in your own bathroom.

