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<blockquote data-quote="RocketCowboy" data-source="post: 649133" data-attributes="member: 25095"><p>Howdy and welcome to Nikonites!!!</p><p></p><p>I also started my digital photography experience with a Nikon D5x00, specifically the D5300 at the time. It’s a great camera, very capable, and not priced like the more professionally oriented camera models. It will provide you similar control over your images, while some settings need to be changed through on-screen menus rather than tactile controls like buttons or command wheels.</p><p></p><p>On lenses, I started with the two lens kit. It came with an 18-55mm and a 55-300mm set of zoom lenses. The current versions of those lenses are even better. I think they are a great place to start, unless you just want a single lens to carry around which would be that 18-140mm you mentioned. From there, you can start watching what focal lengths you to decide where to spend money on more expensive lenses. </p><p></p><p></p><p>Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="RocketCowboy, post: 649133, member: 25095"] Howdy and welcome to Nikonites!!! I also started my digital photography experience with a Nikon D5x00, specifically the D5300 at the time. It’s a great camera, very capable, and not priced like the more professionally oriented camera models. It will provide you similar control over your images, while some settings need to be changed through on-screen menus rather than tactile controls like buttons or command wheels. On lenses, I started with the two lens kit. It came with an 18-55mm and a 55-300mm set of zoom lenses. The current versions of those lenses are even better. I think they are a great place to start, unless you just want a single lens to carry around which would be that 18-140mm you mentioned. From there, you can start watching what focal lengths you to decide where to spend money on more expensive lenses. Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk [/QUOTE]
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