For those of us who want to upgrade to FX and/or dont need a D810/D850 there is the Nikon D750. In general, I found the D750 to live up to most of the rave reviews with some caveats that may, or may not be important to many photographers.
For those of us who want to upgrade to FX and/or dont need a D810/D850 there is the Nikon D750. In general, I found the D750 to live up to most of the rave reviews with some caveats that may, or may not be important to many photographers.
Upgraded from a D7000 and what a difference. Low light performance is very good. Shoot indoor sports for my daughters teams focus is fast, pics barely have any noise at 10000-12800 iso. Outdoor and landscape photography is tack sharp with nice colors. Wifi is nice and works well.
I'm very happy with my choice. This camera is quite heavy, but not unwieldy. I am still learning all the features and differences from my previous camera (different brand), but I'm thrilled with the shots I'm getting so far. The kit lens (24-120) has a beautiful range for a starter lens as well.
Just did a 2019 calendar and out of the thirteen pics i used; 5. P900 4. D5300 2. Sony wx350 2. iPhone Out off these cameras i was mostly disappointed with the D5300. The D750 attracted my attention because the price has been lowered and may be it was time to up grade from the D5300.
To understand why it is perfect for me and I think to 99% of the photographers I have to tell you what I think its weaknesses are, when it is not good for you, or maybe it is good but you could have a better (more specific) camera.
In the past 12 months Nikon has released seven D-SLRs. Five of them have housed full-frame sensors. What used to be the sole territory of the professional has become accessible to photographers with more modest ambitions.
The D750's superior autofocus, noise performance, video mode and articulated screen make it well worth the extra cost compared to Nikon and Canon's entry-level full-frame SLRs for those who can afford it. It's also a pretty good match for the much pricier Canon EOS 5D Mark III .
You feel the quality when you hold this camera. It is a magnificent camera for photography. Image quality is really superb and low light capability is really impressing, especially when you pair it with prime lenses. Camera has a tilt screen which is really great for versatility.
It's been 1-1/2 years and I migrated - reluctantly - from shooting Canon for 10 years. The 51-point AF, combined with the versatile AF modes was the main attraction while also moving up to FX format given the range of my subject interests widening.
It's big and bulky, but this is one of the most comfortable, intuitive DSLRs money can buy
Superb handling; Great performance; Great image quality
Quite big and heavy; No in-body stabilisation; No 4K video
Copyright © Global Compare Group Limited t/a PriceMe 2024