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Canon rebel t3i review 2014
Canon rebel t3i review 2014









canon rebel t3i review 2014

CANON REBEL T3I REVIEW 2014 ISO

My problem is that I wish that Canon had actually tried to increase the dynamic range, color depth, and high ISO ability a bit more. In fact, it has quite stellar image quality. Here’s the thing: I can’t say that the T3i has bad image quality. The T3i is still a very viable option: and an amazing one at that.

canon rebel t3i review 2014

If you’re shooting during the day time with lots of light, then don’t worry. The latter has almost never failed me in low-light. If you want to shoot in low light though, you’re better off going with the 60D or the 7D. So is there anything good about it? Sure: it was as quick as the 60D in my tests in good lighting. To top it off, I felt that manually selecting the focusing points was painfully slow: especially for event shooting. In low light and with lenses slower than F/2.8, the T3i seemed to struggle a bit as with my Canon 24-105mm F/4 L IS. Even the wireless flash control option has an Easy setting. Other than that, the camera was extremely straight-forward. – Creative filters require a longer process than it really should – Hard to manually select the focusing points – To shoot video, you need to turn the dial all the way to the other end of the spectrum My images were sent to my laptop and ready for me to edit when I got back to me. The best thing had to be the fact that of any camera I tested, this one played the best with the Eye-Fi Card. The camera was perhaps the easiest of the Rebels to use though it did have its kinks. Of anything about this camera, the flip out LCD screen is perhaps a god-send. Though the lens far outweighs the camera, if you shoot with the camera at waist level and flip out the LCD screen, a stable shot can be achieved when shooting handheld at shutter speeds down to 1/30th…no seriously, they can be. Though I didn’t mention it in the review, I used the camera once in my room with my ancient Canon 80-200mm F/2.8 L. Indeed, it was also the one to deliver the best image quality of any camera I’ve used for street photography. With that said though, this is perhaps one of the lightest street cameras I’ve ever used when I put the 35mm F/1.4 L on it. I also much prefer the back dial and a bit more heft to my camera. I’m personally used to a heck of a lot sturdier in my cameras. I’m going to be flat out honest here: it’s a Rebel. Afterward I used Lightroom 3 to tweak the image quality.ĭay 5– Event shooting, portraits with wireless flash control, and more night scenes. The results were really quite good.ĭay 4– shooting portraits using a casual approach to capture candid emotions. The reason for this is because I prefer the process of stepping into the digital darkroom and creating the art myself.ĭay 3– street photography at night using the high ISO settings. While they make great prints, I didn’t care much for them to be honest. So is it right for you? If you’re reading this, you may want to take a look at our list of best budget lenses, our recommended Canon lenses and also the three way duel between the Canon 60D, 7D, and T2i (which will be updated soon).ĭay 2– testing the camera’s creative filters. We’ve tested it at events, for portraits, at night, etc. With multiple days of testing finished, the Canon T3i has been shipped back and returned.











Canon rebel t3i review 2014