this post was submitted on 30 Nov 2023
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Photography

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A place to politely discuss the tools, technique and culture of photography.

This is not a good place to simply share cool photos/videos or promote your own work and projects, but rather a place to discuss photography as an art and post things that would be of interest to other photographers.

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I live on the coast and love animals. The subjects would be seals, birds, and also forest animals. In most cases I would ideally be able to get reasonably close but sometimes from afar, like an eagle a couple hundred feet up in a tree.

I’ve been told I take great pictures, but usually these are landscape photos taken with an iPhone 13 Pro Max. I think I have a decent eye for framing (not sure if I’m using the term correctly), lighting, and I’m often opportunistic. However, I am of course a complete amateur and know nothing about proper cameras and the hobby looks quite daunting to me. I’ve been looking for a new hobby and photography never interested me much before but I’ve been getting bored and would love to be able to get out into nature more often and take some quality pictures of animals along the way.

My budget would ideally be less than $700USD, but I could be flexible.

Any advice, or resources to point me in the right direction would be greatly appreciated! I hope I’m in the right sub. Thank you all in advance.

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[–] plasma_phys@alien.top 1 points 11 months ago

$700 is a tight budget for wildlife, but is doable. You'll have to buy used; I buy all my camera gear used from reputable dealers or manufacturer refurbished though, and I've never had a problem.

I think you have two good options at that price point - a used bridge camera like the Nikon P950, or a used DSLR with an older long focal length lens. The former is going to be smaller and offers more magnification at the expense of image quality, while the latter is going to be larger and heavier.

For the latter option, no matter the brand, you should try to spend as much of that budget on the longest and widest max aperture lens you can find, and then get the cheapest compatible camera body that has the minimum features you need. When it comes to wildlife, money goes much further on lenses than it does on camera bodies. I'm only familiar with Canon though, where your best bet might be an EF 400mm f5.6 (~$600) and a 40D camera body (~$70). That combo is a little low on megapixels and you won't be able to zoom in and out with that lens, but it will still be more than capable of capturing stunning images at a good distance; wildlife photography YouTuber Duade Paton uses that camera to great effect in a number of budget-oriented videos.