Huss
Member
The best camera is the one you have with you. But there are differing reasons why you may have that camera with you. If you have a specific intent for what you are going to do, you pick the best tool for that.
But casually? On paper there are some very sweet cameras, but in reality they just are not much fun to use, or lug around.
One camera (actually two) that I use quite a bit when I just want to have a camera with me is the Konica C35EF3. Funny thing is technically it perhaps is one of the worst of the C35 series. But what makes it so good to use is that even though Konica built it out of plastic, they have given it a feel and heft that is just right. It feels solid. It is a zone focus camera - with the generic easy to understand pictograms on one side of the lens, actual distance markers on the other.
It has a pop up flash that you control when u feel like it. It has a nice lever wind. Nice viewfinder. Uses AA batteries. It's just a 'nice' camera that is super simple to use, gives decent results and the design is very attractive.
Don't read the specs on this one! I thought it was a mis-print when I read the slowest shutter speed is 1/60 sec! But with ISO 400 film (the highest that can be set), 1/60 @ 2.8 allows some dusk-ish use...
And here is a shout out for zone focus cameras - unlike some AF P&S cameras I've owned (eg crappy Olympus Stylus/Mju 3.5) - zone focus cameras have no shooting delay and focus where you have set focus. Instead of AF-ing on something else in the picture..
So yeah, this is a simple, fun camera that you like to take along with you. I felt the same way about my Nikon LW35AF until it broke just sitting there...
But casually? On paper there are some very sweet cameras, but in reality they just are not much fun to use, or lug around.
One camera (actually two) that I use quite a bit when I just want to have a camera with me is the Konica C35EF3. Funny thing is technically it perhaps is one of the worst of the C35 series. But what makes it so good to use is that even though Konica built it out of plastic, they have given it a feel and heft that is just right. It feels solid. It is a zone focus camera - with the generic easy to understand pictograms on one side of the lens, actual distance markers on the other.
It has a pop up flash that you control when u feel like it. It has a nice lever wind. Nice viewfinder. Uses AA batteries. It's just a 'nice' camera that is super simple to use, gives decent results and the design is very attractive.
Don't read the specs on this one! I thought it was a mis-print when I read the slowest shutter speed is 1/60 sec! But with ISO 400 film (the highest that can be set), 1/60 @ 2.8 allows some dusk-ish use...
And here is a shout out for zone focus cameras - unlike some AF P&S cameras I've owned (eg crappy Olympus Stylus/Mju 3.5) - zone focus cameras have no shooting delay and focus where you have set focus. Instead of AF-ing on something else in the picture..
So yeah, this is a simple, fun camera that you like to take along with you. I felt the same way about my Nikon LW35AF until it broke just sitting there...
