If you can scan such a trio in, you could use modern tech to create an 'HDR' (high dynamic range) photo. They can be quite breathtaking.Tero wrote:I was quite happy with film cameras. Mine were manual with built in meter. F stop, shutter speed, zoom, focus. I would shoot three in important situations. Overexposed, underexposed and on the meter at the center.
You are likely right about the chip, but consider doing a price study. You may well find that four 4gb chips are the same price, or cheaper, and remember the thing about eggs and baskets...Gawdzilla wrote:I shoot dozens of shots and keep the one or two I want. I'm loving this DLSR era. With the price of buy and developing 120 and 200 film, I'm good with a 16 gig SD chip.Tero wrote:I was quite happy with film cameras. Mine were manual with built in meter. F stop, shutter speed, zoom, focus. I would shoot three in important situations. Overexposed, underexposed and on the meter at the center.
I just got a 64gb chip for my birthday, and it has a failure problem. It is quite rare, but my camera writes the odd bad file with the SDXC format. Also, I have had 2 cards fail (over my whole experience, that isn't bad). If you have only one card, a failure can stop you cold.