Nikon FA would be a nice choice. It's light and has a bit of automation if you want it. Check eBay and ensure the LCD is in working order with no bleed. Since you have Nikon, keep her in that family so she can make use of your lenses for now.
Honestly, I have several young women friends who have all manual cameras. One was super frustrated at first, even though she has a really nice old Minolta, but she carries a work record with her all the time now and has had to sneak up on the all-manual stuff. She got there, but only after backing away from the all manual and learning some.
No different than manual, though -- the meter gives wrong info. That (to me) is one of the interesting challenges of shooting with older gear -- you have to listen to the meter but also know when it's wrong!I’m really getting pissed at aperture priority these days. As I explore a small scene with my eyes to the finder, I know the correct shutter speed is not anywhere from 1/1000 to 1/125 just because the scene has more or less sky or water.
I have to wonder if digital has led us to take the wrong approach. I remember the first time I used an SLR
But I don't care. I'm making a recommendation for today's young people based on today's experiences with different of today's young people. And that recommendation is an inexpensive SLR that fits exactly what young friends like.
.I have to wonder if digital has led us to take the wrong approach. I remember the first time I used an SLR -- I think it was a Canon, definitely all-manual, and a friend of my dad's loaned it to me to take some train pictures. I'm guessing she set the shutter speed to 1/60. She told me to focus and to turn the aperture ring until "the needle lines up with the lollypop". Worked! Aside from one badly underexposed photo, I got a deck of usable shots. Wasn't a leap to match-needle metering on my KX a few years later.
Aaron
| Marketed | April 1984 |
Guys, I am very grateful for all your help and good advice. I have attached here a photograph of my daughter, with her first SLR, an Olympus OM10. The photograph was taken with my Nikon FM3A, Nikkor Micro 55/2.8, film is Fomapan 100. I had a blue filter on that day.
All the best to all !
Guys, I am very grateful for all your help and good advice. I have attached here a photograph of my daughter, with her first SLR, an Olympus OM10. The photograph was taken with my Nikon FM3A, Nikkor Micro 55/2.8, film is Fomapan 100. I had a blue filter on that day.
All the best to all !
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