Canon Rebel Cameras
Canon Rebel Cameras combines
professional-level technology and a high enough resolution for
amateur photographers with an affordable price ...
When digital cameras first came onto the market they seemed
like a great idea, but as cameras they really weren’t very
good. Most of them had low resolutions which produced
grainy photos which were fine for emailing to friends but
didn’t look very good as prints, and they looked even worse if
they were blown up to 5x7 or larger. Though a few
high-end cameras were available they were expensive and tough
to use.
Professionals still used 35mm single lens reflex (SLR)
cameras, and amateurs who wanted pro-level cameras without
pro-level prices used SLRs like the Canon Rebel. Canon
Rebel cameras set the bar for “prosumer” single lens reflexes
with the original Canon Rebel, which combined a tough, sturdy
camera body with a wide range of interchangeable lenses for far
less than the $1,000 body price that most professional level
SLRs carried. The Rebel took fast, clear photos, was easy
to use, and was supported by a great range of lenses from
wide-angle fisheyes to long-reaching telephotos.
As digital cameras got more advanced, people started making
more and more noise about some professional photographers going
over to the dark side and shooting in digital instead of 35mm;
some even switched completely to digital photography for the
ease of use of the cameras, the ability to digitally remaster
their photos quickly and easily, and the ability to take
hundreds of photos and delete all but the very best. The
technology caught up as well, with professional-level digital
SLRs weighing in at over ten mega pixels apiece, enough for
just about all but wall-size enlargements.
The Canon Rebel camera series answered with the Digital
Rebel which, like the original Rebel, brought
professional-level technology down a half step for the
prosumer. The Digital Rebel offered eight mega pixel
resolution, high enough for just about any conceivable amateur
use, and a host of new, high-quality Canon lenses. Not
only that, the Digital Rebel also supported all of the lenses
the original 35mm Rebel accepted. Many enterprising
amateurs who already had 35mm Rebels bought Digital Rebels as
well, since their lenses could interchange easily between the
two camera bodies.
Canon Rebel cameras have set the bar and established the
prosumer range of cameras, both in 35mm and digital formats,
between the high-end professional cameras and the lower-end
point and shoots. Not surprisingly, the Digital Rebel has
become the best-selling digital SLR, and the 35mm Rebel is one
of the best selling 35mm SLRs.
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