this post was submitted on 13 Jan 2025
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Travel Photography
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Buying a camera now is basically for one thing - having quick access to physical knobs and buttons to change settings on the fly. Same goes with being able to manually zoom quickly, or focus quickly on a particular object in the frame.
You can accomplish this sort of thing with a cell phone camera, but not quickly. By the time you're done fussing around with it, the motorbike covered in ducks has sped off down the road.
I bought a Nikon D90 in Vietnam about 12 years ago. It was more expensive than it would have been in the US. Someone here might recommend a good camera, but either you won't be able to find it locally, or it'll be out of your budget. The D90 was already somewhat obsolete when I bought it, but damn did I get some really great pictures that I'll cherish forever.
I recommend going to a local shop, preferably with a local friend. Try and touch stuff as much as you can.
Watch some videos on aperature, exposure, ISO, and what you can accomplish with those things. I generally prefer letting the camera pick ISO and exposure automatically, and having manual control of aperature. I found that gave me good control of getting the effects I wanted (short depth of field, for example).
Thanks for the comment! I actually have a Vietnamese wife so she can definitely help me with local shops but unfortunately I live in the sticks: Nghe An province, so I'm wary of getting one locally. After some research I've found these two options, what do you think:
Canon EOS R50 Canon EOS Rebel T7/2000D
Unfortunately I'm not up to speed with cameras anymore, but hopefully someone else can chime in.
Not sure if this is still useful (it might be for future visitors), but anyway... I think the R50 is a step above the 2000D. If you want to stay near the stated budget, you're looking at the R100 in the R range. But even with the kit lens that's going to stretch that budget. Yes, you'll need a lens, and ideally something like a lens hood, maybe a protective filter, it adds up.