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<blockquote data-quote="aroy" data-source="post: 647386" data-attributes="member: 16090"><p>Welcome to the site.</p><p></p><p>A higher MP body will definitely help in Landscape shooting so I definitely vote for the D850. You can start with the evergreen 50mm F1.8 and then slowly graduate to more lenses as and when you feel the need for.</p><p></p><p>A higher MP camera will also benefit from sharper lenses. You can use DXO site to compare the sharpness of various lenses within your budget to shortlist what will be good and what is not worth it.</p><p></p><p>Regarding menus, I normally use a very few features and most of my shots are at a fixed ISO, central focus point, spot metering Aperture Priority. If and when required I change the ISO using Fn button and the thumb wheel. So in my case I really prefer less cluttered D3300 compared to the D300 or FX bodies.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="aroy, post: 647386, member: 16090"] Welcome to the site. A higher MP body will definitely help in Landscape shooting so I definitely vote for the D850. You can start with the evergreen 50mm F1.8 and then slowly graduate to more lenses as and when you feel the need for. A higher MP camera will also benefit from sharper lenses. You can use DXO site to compare the sharpness of various lenses within your budget to shortlist what will be good and what is not worth it. Regarding menus, I normally use a very few features and most of my shots are at a fixed ISO, central focus point, spot metering Aperture Priority. If and when required I change the ISO using Fn button and the thumb wheel. So in my case I really prefer less cluttered D3300 compared to the D300 or FX bodies. [/QUOTE]
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