Best camera for beginners?

Fa
- in Lenovo
6

Hay I want to start with photography, best of all portraits and nature photography I like to photograph it at night and also the sky in the day when there are a lot of clouds, and of course the question arises, which camera with which lens of course I know that more objective ones are much better but in the beginning I want to start with one. And what image editing program with which laptop I have a Lenovo laptop but do not know if it is suitable for image editing. And to go back to the camera it would be great if you tell me your experiences with mirror reflex or without which brand and which objective works best for you.

ab

Budget? How much do you want to spend?

At night: long exposures with tripod or movement photographed from the hand?

Nature photography: landscape (wide angle), wild birds (tele) or snow crystals (macro) or what exactly?

Ha

First of all, the question arises, what do you want to spend, because there are many good cameras and without knowing your budget, you could now suggest an EOS RP or Sony Alpha 7II. Both play with lens so in the price range of 1000 - 2000 euro.

Fa

Yes, around the 1000 or 1500

Fa

That's about 1500 or 1000

Ha

Then the following would be suitable:
- As already mentioned the Sony Alpha 7II with lens for ~ 1100 euro.
Very good for night photos, professional camera. The only downside is the slow continuous shooting of 5 frames / sec.

- Canon EOS M50 or M200 with lens ~ 600 euro
Cameras for beginners and advanced. Both are similarly good and differ mainly only in the size and the missing hot shoe on the M200. There's still enough money for additional lenses that are actually more important in photography than the camera.

- Sony Alpha 6400 with lens ~ 1000 euro
- Canon EOS M6 Mark II with lens ~ 1200 euro
- Fujifilm XT-30 with lens ~ 1200 euro
Compact cameras for advanced and semi-pros that can shoot extremely fast picture sequences with up to 30 frames / sec (Sony unfortunately only 11 B / s).

Sa

Get a little macro of 60 or 80mm for portraits. They are brighter and can also be used for nature photos (macro hold). So you have a lens for 2 different things. Maybe even a lens with high focal length for birds, etc. To photograph the sky (actually very banal) and a kit lens enough. Do you want to take landscape shots at night with stars, etc, a wide angle that is brighter. Processing via laptop is not optimal, but should go… But try to calibrate the monitor with a device (Spyder)