The quality of camera do you can take easily pictures, easy access to each important settings,... It's almost the speed of material and reaction of photographer who is really impacted. More features too but with simple one you can do good pictures.
The photogtaphe adapt picture with the camera he have.
The photogtaphe adapt picture with the camera he have.
Quote: swisscore 26.08.25, 07:15To the cited post
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mais il faut débuter avec un boitier standard , faire son apprentissage
et progresser , puis par la suite monter en gamme
le premier point est un bon objectif
cordialement
Ray
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mais il faut débuter avec un boitier standard , faire son apprentissage
et progresser , puis par la suite monter en gamme
le premier point est un bon objectif
cordialement
Ray
Quote: Vladimir Danilov 24.01.05, 13:38To the cited post
Great question — and honestly, it’s one most photographers wrestle with at some point.
In my experience, good photography depends far more on light, composition, and timing than on the camera body itself. A simple camera in skilled hands will almost always outperform an expensive setup used without understanding exposure or framing.
Where better gear helps is in flexibility — low light performance, dynamic range, autofocus speed. But those are refinements, not foundations.
Some of the most compelling images I’ve seen were taken on entry-level cameras (and even phones). The difference was that the photographer understood light and storytelling.
If you had to invest more time in one area right now, I’d say study light before upgrading gear.
Great question — and honestly, it’s one most photographers wrestle with at some point.
In my experience, good photography depends far more on light, composition, and timing than on the camera body itself. A simple camera in skilled hands will almost always outperform an expensive setup used without understanding exposure or framing.
Where better gear helps is in flexibility — low light performance, dynamic range, autofocus speed. But those are refinements, not foundations.
Some of the most compelling images I’ve seen were taken on entry-level cameras (and even phones). The difference was that the photographer understood light and storytelling.
If you had to invest more time in one area right now, I’d say study light before upgrading gear.

