Your analysis, below, makes sense to
you , and that's what
matters, as it's
your $1,200, right? So who cares what us morons
in an Internet forum think?
But you asked if you're missing anything, so here's my answer: a
landscape, in print or on screen, should look
natural . If you
read the Rebel D's review, and look at the comparisons with other
dSLRs and with a high-end prosumer cam, well,
all the dSLR images
look natural, kind of film-like ... while the high-end prosumer cam
looks digital, obviously oversharpened and overprocessed. That's
straight out of the camera.
In practice, I make fantastic 10x15" prints from my D60 and a
softish 16-35L ( which I've replaced with a sharper 15-30 ).
There's also the small matter of what pics
can be shot with
either camera ... this one took a 30 second exposure and a 16 mm
lens:
I have decided to wait for a DSLR in the Rebel price range to come
along with at least a 10 megapixel sensor. Why? I enjoy landscape
photography and need all the detail I can get. I have an S50 now
and make great 11x14 prints at 180 pixel resolution with the 4/3
sensor. A 300D at 11x14 with it's 3/2 sensor makes 11x14 prints at
186 pixel resolution. Only a 6 pixel difference. I'm sure that at
low ISO's the prints would be comparable. My point, for me, is why
spend 11 or 12 hundred bucks (xtra battery, memory etc.) for an
outfit that would only progress my photography very marginally. Am
I missing something here? John