If I were ever to upgrade, I would look into the 5D series. Glass>Camera though.
Even after some years, this camera is great, and I have no need of upgrading; It does everything I could ask; All I want now is more L glass
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Manufacturer: Canon
If I were ever to upgrade, I would look into the 5D series. Glass>Camera though.
Even after some years, this camera is great, and I have no need of upgrading; It does everything I could ask; All I want now is more L glass
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I love cannon with excellent 3:2, 3 inch, 1.04 million dot screen. The T4i is supposedly better with video. They have the same sensor so the picture quality is going to be great. I was on the fence between the 60d and the T4i.
same sensor so the picture quality is going to be great
It's not as light as I expected
The 2 lens that come with this bundle are garbage. both the 55-250mm and the 50mm lens have very narrow focal distances. Although the zoom is great, it is not practical at all when taking a normal picture. For scenery, portraits, or just some vacation photos, the lens are very inconvenient.
After a longer wait than normal, Canon introduced the EOS 60D to a market keen for its arrival. It arrived into a world where digital SLRs can be seen gracing the neck of everyone who's ever thought of being a photographer, so it wasn't surprising that Canon seemed to have rethought its entry-level...
Excellent 18-megapixel sensor with superb detail; Very good high ISO performance; especially for 18-megapixel subframe sensor; 3.0-inch; 1,040K-dot Vari-angle LCD is very useful for video and Live View; Quick Menu system; The usual Canon enhancements: HTP; ALO; Lens Peripheral Illumination; Sharp
Body probably not as rugged as mag-alloy 50D, AF assist only works when flash is up, though flash can be forced off, Auto-exposure not reliable in very low light, No in-camera image stabilization (lens based, 18-135mm kit lens has noticeable chromatic aberration and geometric distortion; also
Great performance, handling and flexibility, but the kit lens is less than impressive
Strong color performance; Lots of controls for more advanced users
Kit lens leaves much to be desired; Fairly noisy; especially at high ISOs
Bridging the gap between the EOS 7D and the EOS 550D in price, performance and features
- Articulating LCD; - Top LCD; - Lock on jog dial; - burst rate; - full HD videos; - image quality
- AF speed in Live View; - Plastic body; - No weather seals
Sept 28th. Canon recently introduced the 18 megapixel Canon EOS 60D digital SLR, a camera geared towards enthusiast level photographers, and which serves as a successor to the Canon EOS 50D.
This 18 megapixel DSLR is the latest iteration in the Canon 10/20/30/40/50D range of mid-priced cameras. The new feature that is immediately obvious is the swivelling high resolution LCD screen.
This is such a beautifully evolved camera series that there is not much to say other than "it's just like the 50D only better." Low light performance is brilliant; Auto white balance is not wonderful but selecting a setting appropriate to the light source fixes that.
Live view is still clunky and auto-focus in movie mode is still frustrating; The instruction book warns "continuous focus on a moving subject is not possible.
The Canon EOS 60D sits between the and the in Canon's mid-range digital SLR offerings, and it's a mighty beast to shoot with. It's fast, it has a vari-angle LCD screen, it can shoot high-definition video, and it has useful built-in image processing.
Fast burst mode; excellent high ISO performance; hinged LCD screen; Full HD video recording
Its buttons could be better; the 8-way control button feels terrible and doesn't always respond properly
And so it is with the EOS 60D that the company has once again hit the figurative nail on the proverbial head with its technology and design. In some ways, it has created a sub-category- the ‘Creative Prosumer' range.
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