In addition to having a macro lens, choose a very high f stop - like 16 or 32 or higher if you can. You may need a tripod to keep the camera steady, but you'll get more of the tool in focus with the better depth of field from the higher f stop (meaning smaller aperture).
I'm curious. I see some people here that take really good close up tool pics. What kind of set up do you use? ...
And don't forget to take a bilinear microcalculation of the treble matrix as it pertains to the colonoscopy of the phase matrix. You certainly wouldn't want to aggrivate the conditional stability of the lunar atomizer by fluctuating during optimization.That would be bad.Def
I am certain that each and every one of those other things that you guys mentioned would be helpful to anyone wishing to get the most out of your camera, and I would love to see any and all the info you have on that stuff, but the bottm line is that 665ae seems to want (correct me if I am wrong Mike!) to just snap off a few decent looking pictures. If that's all he (or anyone else) wants to do, then why burden them with extraneous information and jargon?
Def isn't always as dumb as he looks! Def
99.9 % of my camera use is inside photography involving posting photos on WWW - forums, eBay, homepage,etc.I really want a larger frame DCWhat I would like:tripod luglarger body manual controls are not a necessitylens threads to add lenses / filters OR the ability to change complete lens to a macro lenstripodunder US$400Nice to have:firewire connectionlarge LCD screen - 2" minimumnon proprietary batteryease of use - point and shoot - manual adjustments are not a necessity.cheap memory cardsDC that Look good so far:1. Sony DSC-H52. Sony DSC-H93. Kodak Z6124. Canon S3