Nikon 35mm 1.8
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Nikon 35mm 1.8

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Give your first idea to the Canon EOS Rebel T3 camera by Skywalker2010
The T3 has a native 100-6400 ISO sensitivity range, Canon's current generation DIGIC 4 image processor and a 1.6x crop factor thanks to its APS-C CMOS sensor. As is customary with an entry-level DSLR Canon Battery Charger, a variety of scene modes complements the traditional manual shooting exposure options. Somewhat disappointing was the inclusion of a 2.7-inch LCD monitor in a camera slightly larger than the Nikon D3100 with its 3.0-inch screen.
The T3 continues one of my usual Canon gripes - files are output at 72 dots per inch which results in an image size of almost 60 x 40 inches, making them hard to view in e-mails. You have to resize to send reasonably viewable shots, or resize to make good prints. At least one other Japanese camera company outputs their stuff at 300 dpi - perfect for printing at least, but you'll be resizing for e-mail.
Moving past image size, the T3 seems to acquire focus at entry-level DSLR speed, and shutter lag seems DSLR quick as well. AF tracking on some gulls during a dawn patrol shooting session at the beach went pretty well with the 9 point AF system set to "AI Servo." And while the 18-55 lens won't get you close to distant subjects at the telephoto end, it's slightly wide and covers the 85mm focal range that was the starting point for the 85 to 135mm range that 35mm film photographers tended to favor for portrait work.
The Rebel T3 will be Canon's new basic entry-level model, moving the XS and XSi Canon Camera Charger out of the lineup. It will offer a 12.1 megapixel sensor, a Digit IV processor, intelligent scene selection and up to 3 fps burst shooting. Video mode will offer 720p HD resolution at 30 or 25 fps.
It's now designed to detect scenes and select the appropriate scene mode, a feature moved up from Canon's PowerShot series. A Feature Guide in the T3i's menus will offer more guidance for beginners with text instructions available for different shooting modes. The built-in flash unit will be able to wirelessly trigger other flash units.
The T3 has a macro scene shooting option, but the 18-55 lenses will focus as close as 9.8-inches across its focal range, so setting apertures via aperture priority to pick up a tiny bit more depth of field is also in play. Still image quality at default settings looks good; video seems okay for 720 HD resolutions, but I didn't get a chance at any good video subjects for this first look. CMOS sensors bring up concerns about rolling shutter effect during video capture, and that's one of many areas we'll explore in shooting a lot more still and video with the T3 for its complete review. We'll have that review in the near future, but so far the T3 Canon EOS Battery Charger seems like a pretty good performer overall.
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