D3200

For a few months now I’ve been eyeing off DSLRs.  I’m not sure, now, what triggered it… I think just a couple of events, like Jen & Vante’s wedding, where I wanted for a better camera than my little Sony DSC-TX10.  While it’s a great little camera, and was totally worth having for Hawaii alone, it is of course a happy-snapper, and it just doesn’t deal with things like low-light very well.

So I researched and talked with various people and even played with a bunch of Nikons, Canons and Panasonics, along with Steve & Marisa.  I really liked the full-size bodies of the Nikon D7000 and its ilk – they’re the only ones which are big enough to fit my hands comfortably.  The smaller bodies of the entry level Canon & Nikons felt okay, but pretty cramped.  The Panasonic – a DMC-G3, if memory serves – was of course tiny by comparison and even more awkward to hold, though there was some appeal to its diminutive form factor, just for the portability aspect.  I was a bit leery of it, though – I’d never heard of the micro four thirds system, and though the store clerk was singing its virtues, in the end I steered clear of it, if only because my primary goal was good low-light performance, to which end an even smaller sensor made little sense.

After weeks of this, I’d decided that my favourite was the D800.  Of course, $3,300 just for the body seemed just a little extravagant, by my standards anyway.  I tossed and turned on it, and even convinced myself briefly that I would get it – at which point I appealed to Marisa to talk me out of it, but she was quite fond of the idea and encouraged me instead.  Gah!  But in the end I decided it would be wiser to take a smaller first step.

So I went with the D3200.  It doesn’t have quite the features I originally wanted – I kind of wanted a hypothetical D5200, i.e. an updated D5100 – but I didn’t want to wait some indeterminate length of time for that to come out.

So D3200 it is.  I ordered it from B&H Foto, along with Nikon’s common 55-300 (bundled with it at $150 off).  I successfully resisted the urge to go too crazy with lenses, though I’ve since been looking at wide-aperture portrait lenses quite a bit…

Anyway, it’s been a lot of fun to play with.  I put the manual on my iPad and read it cover to cover before the box even arrived – stupid slow-arse 3-day shipping – so now I actually understand what all those modes do beyond “Auto”. ;)

I also bought Aperture, because it seemed apropos.  I was surprised to discover that it shares the photo library with iPhoto – that’s a nice safety net.  Unfortunately the RAW support for the D3200 on Mac OS X, even with yesterday’s update, is buggy – it sometimes renders the lower half of photos as garbage.  It also interprets some photos very badly – totally mangles the colours.  It seems to like cranking the temperature way up (among other things)… I haven’t yet determined if that’s based on the metadata in the photo or its attempts to “auto-optimise” the photo.  After a few days I became pretty good at correcting its mistakes, but it is tedious to have to fiddle with a good half of my photos.  And it probably bugs Marisa to no end that I keep dragging her over to get her opinion on every other photo. :)

FYI Nikon’s bundled software, ViewNX 2, displays the photos perfectly (and more sharply to boot).  Just to make it clear that this is a Mac OS X bug.  I filed a radar.

But I digress.

Thus far I’ve taken it with me almost everywhere Marisa & I have gone, from walks around our neighbourhood to weekend gatherings with friends.  Photos slowly percolate their way out of Aperture and into Flickr, as per usual.  I’ve been burning the midnight oil to get them all up this week, but I am finally caught up.  ‘course, this weekend I’ll probably take a thousand more… le sigh… anyone wanna be my post-processing minion? ;)

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