After holding out for a long time, I finally gave in and got a digital SLR camera. Though I’ve taken a lot of good pictures with my various point and shoot cameras, I was just running into too many limitations.
I researched this one the smart way; by asking a few experts. Several long and informative lectures later, I realized I was about to tumble down the slippery slope of increasingly expensive lenses and actually having to apply some physics to my photos. The final package was a 10 megapixel Canon Digital Rebel XTi (400D)
with a few extra bucks for the 18-55mm kit lens and Canon’s f1.4 50mm
prime lens, plus the usual accessories.

Amazon shipped lightning fast, though apparently because they didn’t tape the box very well. Everything survived though, and I dug into the prime lens first - a little heavy, solid. The kit lens was a bit lighter, but screwing them both onto the body gave me an immediate appreciation for their different fields of view versus my point and shoot (Canon PowerShot SD630
f2.8-4.9 5.8-17.4mm). The body itself is a nice size, a good fit for my hands, and shouldn’t be too bulky for travel.

I skimmed enough of the field guide book to get started while the battery charged, and dove into playing around. The first photo I got with some real depth-of-filed was a definite wow moment, and I quickly discovered what Merle said about having to move your body much more with a fixed lens. In the afternoon shade inside and out, the camera didn’t disappoint, though it certainly made it clear I have quite a bit of learning to do!
The photos in this set are all unmodified, except for cropping my furry self-portrait. I noted some of settings; now that I actually care about them it may hasten my move to Gallery.
View the DSLR photos