Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography major - Has Pentax K-R 18-55MM used this SLR? To tell the truth, I'm just a little white, obsessed with C, N, K and amateur photography. Please recommend it.

Has Pentax K-R 18-55MM used this SLR? To tell the truth, I'm just a little white, obsessed with C, N, K and amateur photography. Please recommend it.

First, I saw a Pentax powder. ...

If you say Pentax Seconds Canon Nikon, it can only be Pentax Powder ... not twice, not at all.

But what's the point of seconds? The entry-level SLR is a large cmos interchangeable lens card machine.

Judging from the product trends of several manufacturers, the entry-level SLR has almost been abandoned. Because it is only a matter of time before large cmos cameras with interchangeable lenses without mirrors fully dominate the consumer market.

Let me give you a brief analysis: if your budget is limited, then k-r, which is already relatively low in price, is still a good choice. However, with the downward adjustment of the price of single electricity, I think that if you pay more attention to practicality rather than the "professional sense" and "domineering sense" that SLR gives people, single electricity is actually more suitable for people with such needs.

There is something wrong with the SLR. It's too heavy and big. After all, there is one more reflector than single electricity. In the film age, SLR optical framing can effectively solve the parallax problem between framing and imaging (what you see is what you get), but in the digital age, this has become a chicken rib, because digital cameras directly use photosensitive elements to frame, not only the framing range reaches 100% (SLR can only reach about 95% now).

Too much nonsense, to put it bluntly, entry-level SLR has no technical advantage over single camera, but single camera is smaller and more portable, and single camera and entry-level or even mid-range SLR can no longer image. Now every family has a single camera set with a price below 4000, and in use, the single camera is easier for family photographers from DC, but it has the potential for professional development (the so-called manual control of the shutter aperture of SLR is actually not)

Hehe, this nonsense is just a reference. If you love SLR, of course you should buy SLR. In the choice, which is cheaper to buy, there is little difference between cameras of the same level, mainly because of different design concepts, and the photos taken are the same.