Quote:
Originally Posted by HinFrance
It's an interesting and noble sentiment Karen, and completely misguided.
Michael Schumacher would still have won F1 championships if he'd been driving a Fiat Punto? Don't be soft. Could you have taken this year's winning picture with a jesus phone and no expensive airline ticket? Not a prayer. All other things being equal, the equipment is what will make the difference.
You need the talent, and you need the kit, but most of all you need luck 
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Hi Howard,
Interesting comparison but I beg to differ. Motor racing depends on speed and ability whereas photography depends on creativity and artistic expression. If you are talking about the technical quality of an image (megapixels, noise levels, colour rendtion etc.) then obviously the more expensive cameras will be better than the cheaper ones. But I am referring to artistic expression which I believe is independent of the camera. Quality for me is more about composition, creativity and capturing an extraordinary moment so the that viewer is engaged on a cognitive and emotional level. You can achieve this with either a cheap camera or an expensive one. Looking through last years winners and runners-up in DPOTY 2010,the winner was using a Canon 40D. The second place Adrenaline shot was made with a Canon 550D. Third placed Travel winner used a 6 megapixel Panasonic compact.
I don't think anyone should be put off entering competitions because of the model of camera that they own. If they capture a moment in time that is truly spectacular or have a subject whose portrait tugs at our emotions in some way they should enter it because the photograph itself will speak, the camera model used will be secondary and insignificent.
Interesting debate though ;-)
Karen