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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D600/D610
Invest in D600 or go cheaper with D7000
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<blockquote data-quote="BackdoorArts" data-source="post: 136101" data-attributes="member: 9240"><p>At 3 oz. heavier than the D7100, and 2.5oz heavier than the D7000 I doubt you'd hardly notice. As for depth of field, while there is a difference (provided images are framed the same) I don't know that it's <em>that</em> drastic a difference that it would require more than a stop. Here's a great <a href="http://www.jimgamblin.com/blog/?p=209" target="_blank">blog post</a> explaining and showing the differences (in case anyone reading hasn't heard of the DoF "differences"), which are likely more consequential at longer focal lengths than what you're shooting at weddings. I have to imagine that th IQ you get from the larger pixels on the D600, plus the amazing low light performance, would still yield gains even if you have to boost the ISO to shoot at equivalent settings to what you're shooting now.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BackdoorArts, post: 136101, member: 9240"] At 3 oz. heavier than the D7100, and 2.5oz heavier than the D7000 I doubt you'd hardly notice. As for depth of field, while there is a difference (provided images are framed the same) I don't know that it's [I]that[/I] drastic a difference that it would require more than a stop. Here's a great [URL="http://www.jimgamblin.com/blog/?p=209"]blog post[/URL] explaining and showing the differences (in case anyone reading hasn't heard of the DoF "differences"), which are likely more consequential at longer focal lengths than what you're shooting at weddings. I have to imagine that th IQ you get from the larger pixels on the D600, plus the amazing low light performance, would still yield gains even if you have to boost the ISO to shoot at equivalent settings to what you're shooting now. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
D600/D610
Invest in D600 or go cheaper with D7000
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