I’m a Canon owner so I’m not well versed with Sony bodies. My daughter is looking for a full frame mirrorless body and a versatile walk around lens. Her budget is around $3,000 with body and lens.
I gave her a couple of Canon options namely the Canon R and the R6. The R6 with a lens though would exceed her budget.
I told her that Sony is a good option. I’m looking please for a recommendation with Sony within her budget.
She shoots for fun, family, vacations, scenery.
Thank you,
Pete
**I could put this on the “Camera, Lens and System Buying Advice" forum but thought I would start from the Sony forum.
I'm sure the Canon R is serviceable, but as a first-generation mirrorless, undoubtedly has a variety of quirks and areas where it falls short. (It wasn't until gen 3 that Sony produced a full frame that solved many of their earlier short-comings).
If interested in Sony (and as an A7Riv owner, I think Sony is a good choice, for a variety of reasons including lens choices now, not two or three years down the road, as will be the case with the Canon RF mount), then maybe look at the A7iii, which is still a very capable camera, even if several years old.
However, if she doesn't need it right now, many people expect Sony to replace it later this year with an A7iv, which will probably have some significant advances. (And as a side effect, even if you don't care about them, will cause prices on the "iii" to drop, probably by several hundred dollars).
But I have to ask: Does your daughter really need full-frame? How big does she want to print? You said "She shoots for fun, family, vacations, scenery." The first three of those, and even the fourth if she doesn't print big, can be more than adequately served by APS-C, or even MFT cameras, at lower cost, and smaller size and weight than full-frame, which means that the camera is more likely to be brought along rather than left at home. Maybe look at something like the Fuji X-S10? (Probably stay away, though, from the Fuji 16-80 and 18-135mm zooms, which aren't very good optically. I'd choose the Fuji 18-55 for a small zoom, and maybe supplement it with a longer zoom if she has kids doing sports). Or for Sony, maybe the A6600 camera? Either of those is appreciably smaller than full frame will be, especially once you include a lens or two.