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Third-party camera gear is getting better and better.Ī couple years ago, I probably would have laughed if someone told me that third-party camera gear would actually be a viable alternative. But for now, I have quality gear that works perfectly well. Sure, having upgraded equipment might make my job easier in some ways. So in the meantime, I’ll make do with what I have, which is actually high-quality enough to produce professional images. I already went through this when switching from Nikon, and it was a pretty big financial loss that I’m not willing to go through right now. That’s a pretty significant investment in Canon and I have no illusion of being able to sell any of that gear for close to the value I paid for it. You don’t always need the latest and greatest technology.Īt the time of this writing, my professional photography kit is comprised of 2 Canon DSLRs, 3 Canon Speedlight flashes, and 10 Canon lenses. I cling to the hope that Canon will wisen up and kick ass with a new release, hopefully, sooner rather than later. I’m pretty disappointed with Canon’s latest DSLRs, but I haven’t lost hope. That is to say, camera companies are under a lot of pressure to keep updating their gear to make it increasingly competitive with other camera manufacturers. Just several months after the camera was announced and I had purchased it, Sony released a follow-up camera: the Sony a6500.

I learned this lesson the hard way with the Sony a6300.

Camera tech changes faster than you can blink. I can use my Metabones V adapter and use all of my Canon lenses on both my Sony cameras without a problem.ģ. I loved the Sony a6300 so much that I recently purchased the Sony a7RIII. The more I used it, the more I realized that Sony has been innovating a lot more than Canon has. The main reason I got the Sony in the first place was needing a compact camera while traveling through Asia for a month. I still have all of my Canon gear for my professional shoots, but Sony is definitely winning me over.
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Meanwhile, I’ve been so eager for a camera upgrade that I jumped the gun and bought a Sony a6300 mirrorless camera in April 2016. My husband traded his Nikon gear for Fujifilm several years ago and hasn’t looked back (more on why he switched in the video below). My husband and I have both been tempted over to the dark side and made the switch over to mirrorless camera systems. In the meantime, my Samsung Galaxy S8 and Sony a6300 shoot some pretty impressive 4K, so I’m sticking with them for now.
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I suppose they could always release it in a firmware update at some point. It finally has a proper pop-out LCD screen that is important for making videos, but it’s missing something pretty crucial: 4K video recording. When it comes to video features, the Canon 6D Mark II seems to come up a bit short. Learning videography has been a bit of a challenge, but it’s made much easier by the plethora of affordable, high-quality cameras out there with video functions. In late 2017, I decided to add videography to my skillset. Why I Won’t Invest in Canon More Gear Anytime Soon 1.
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