What camera should I buy? Use our step-by-step guide

You only have to go into a high-street retail store go get an idea of the sheer number of digital cameras on the market. There are so many brands, types and technologies, each one claiming to be the best (of course!) that it’s hard to make sense of it all.

But it’s possible to break all these competing cameras down into a few basic types, and once you do that it becomes much easier to figure out the kind of camera you need. That’s what we’ve done with our guide, and you can follow the links at the bottom of the pages to find which is the best camera currently available in each category.

So we’ll start with the basics and work up through the more advanced cameras to the types the professionals use. But you don’t have to stay with us all the way. Treat this guide like sightseeing tour – when you’ve got to where you want to go, just step off the bus!

Is a smartphone as a good as a regular point-and-shoot compact camera? Apart from not having a zoom, it almost certainly is.

There’s nothing wrong with the cameras in smartphones. The best smartphones have really good cameras, even if they don’t have quite the same impressive amount megapixels as dedicated digital cameras. The thing to remember though is that it’s not all about the amount of megapixels you have – a smartphone with a 8MP camera or above is all you need to produce sharp, detailed shots for Facebook and Twitter, while you can even produce moderately-sized, decent quality prints to hang on your wall.

Take the iPhone 7, for example, with its 12MP camera and easy to use controls, it can produce shots every bit as good (better, often) as a regular point and shoot camera.

As this is the camera you’ll probably have with you all the time, and the one you’ll rely on for capturing your life as it happens, with these photos often ending up as the pictures you will value most in the years to come.

Apple iPhone 6S

Pros: It’s the camera you always have to hand, the results can match those from a regular point-and-shoot compact camera, you can share instantly to Facebook, Twitter and Instagram, you can get apps with amazing effects and additional tools and they can be easy to use.

Cons: You get a fixed focal length lens – you can’t zoom in on distant subjects; the fixed lens is often a wide-angle – great for selfies and getting loads in the frame, but not for flattering portraits; smartphones aren’t so easy to hold; limited control over shooting settings.

Read: 10 best mobile phones in the world today

If you want to capture your life’s adventures, maybe you need an action cam, not a regular point-and-shoot camera.

You can overcome the limitations of your smartphone’s camera easily enough with a ‘proper’ camera, but just before we look at these in detail, there’s another option to consider – action cams. If capturing your life’s adventures is your thing, why not do it with video, not stills? Action cams are tough and simple to use, and come with a whole range of different mounts so that you can attach them to handlebars, skateboards, helmets, the dashboard of your car… even your pet!

They’ve been popularised by the GoPro Hero range, but there are now dozens to choose from, including bullet-style cameras to fit to the side of a helmet, say.

Action cams shoot good-quality full HD footage (some, like the Hero5 Black can even shoot 4K) through fixed focal length wide-angle lenses. Some are completely waterproof, while others come bundled with waterproof housings.

Action cams are the complete antithesis of traditional camcorders – they’re so cheap that you don’t mind giving them a battering, they’re small enough and light enough not to get in the way, and they’re so simple that all you need to know is how to press a button.

GoPro Hero4

Pros: Cheap, tough and simple, surprisingly good full HD movie quality (in some cases 4K), you can mount them on practically anything.

Cons: Fixed wide-angle lenses so no zoom capability, little control over exposure, stills are snapshot quality only.

Read: 10 best GoPro and Action cameras 2016

Cheap point and shoot cameras might look like an easy upgrade from a smartphone, but they have limitations of their own.

So assuming your smartphone doesn’t offer the versatility you need, and that you’re into decent quality stills rather than immersive action video, then a regular digital camera is the way to go.

Point and shoot compact cameras are cheap, and they come with zoom lenses and more control over exposure, white balance, focus and other settings than you’ll get with a smartphone.

The zoom lens is the killer feature. Smartphones offer ‘digital’ zooms, but that’s not the same at all, because these simply crop in on a smaller area of the picture, so you’re losing resolution. Typically, a cheap point-and-shoot compact will have a 5x zoom which goes wider than a smartphone lens – handy for cramped interiors and tall buildings – and much longer, so that you can fill the frame with people and subjects when they’re further away.

But the picture quality isn’t necessarily better. Cheap cameras have cheap lenses, which can produce mushy definition at the edges of the frame or at full zoom, and the sensors are not much larger. Sensor size is a key factor in picture quality, as we’ll see later on. Point-and-shoot cameras typically have 1/2.3 inch sensors, which are about half the size of your little fingernail, and scarcely larger than those in a decent smartphone. Forget about megapixels – the sensor size is what limits the image quality.

Sony W800

A point-and-shoot camera will give you a zoom lens and more controls, but won’t necessarily beat smartphone picture quality.

Pros: Versatility of a zoom lens; much more control over exposure, color and focus; easier to hold.

Cons: Quality often no better than a smartphone, sometimes worse.

Read: Best cheap compact cameras 2016: top cameras for tight budgets

Travel compacts, or ‘long zoom’ compacts, give you point and shoot simplicity but a much longer zoom to capture a wider range of subjects.

A cheap point-and-shoot compact is a relatively small step up from the camera in a smartphone, but long-zoom ‘travel’ compacts take their main advantage – the zoom lens – a whole lot further. A ‘travel compact’ is essentially a point-and-shoot camera but with a much, much longer zoom range, typically 30x.

The idea is that you have a camera that still fits in your pocket, but has such a colossal zoom range that you can photograph practically anything, from beautiful landscapes to far-off landmarks.

After all, when you go on vacation you want a camera small enough to go in a pocket so that it doesn’t get in the way when you’re doing other things, but versatile enough that you won’t miss any once-in-a-lifetime photos.

Travel compacts have the same size sensors as point-and-shoot compacts, but this is changing, with models like the Panasonic Lumix TZ100/ZS100 getting larger 1-inch sized sensors, while the lenses are generally better quality, quite apart from their increased zoom range. Some have more advanced exposure modes for controlling the shutter speed and lens aperture independently, and may even capture RAW files for higher-quality processing back on the computer. Some, like the Lumix TZ100/ZS100 again, even have built-in electronic viewfinders.

If your budget can stretch to it, a long-zoom travel compact is almost certainly a better bet than a cheaper point-and-shoot model. You gain a lot and sacrifice nothing.

Panasonic TZ100

Pros: Massive zoom range that copes with almost any kind of subject; quality generally slightly higher than a point-and-shoot compact; may have more advanced controls.

Cons: More expensive; still uses a small sensor (with some exceptions) which limits the ultimate picture quality, especially in low-light conditions.

Read: Best compact travel cameras

Bridge cameras have DSLR-style controls and massive zooms, but image quality isn’t a strong point unless you want to pay a premium.

If the size of the camera isn’t important but you like the idea of a do-it-all camera with a super-long zoom lens, then a ‘bridge’ camera is the next logical step.

The name ‘bridge camera’ comes from the way these cameras are designed to bridge the gap between a regular compact camera and a DSLR. In fact, bridge cameras often look like DSLRs, with a characteristic ‘fat’ body, a chunky grip on the right hand side, an exposure mode dial on the top and the program AE, aperture-priority, shutter-priority and manual (PASM) modes of DSLRs. Many models now shoot raws as well, but check the specification to make sure.

But while bridge cameras offer monumental zoom ranges, such as the amazing 83x zoom on the Nikon Coolpix P900, there are limitations. In order to achieve these zoom ranges at a manageable size and cost, the makers use the same-sized 1/2.3-inch sensors as you find in smaller compact cameras. You get the look and feel of a DSLR, but you don’t get the image quality.

There are exceptions, though. In the past couple of years the likes of Sony and Panasonic have launched bridge cameras with much larger 1-inch sensors, notably the Sony RX10 III and Panasonic FZ1000. This comes at the expense of zoom range (though still very impressive and more than adequate for most shooting situations) and, well, expense generally, but most keen photographers would swap a little zoom range for a big step up in quality.

Sony RX10 III

Pros: Massive zoom range; DSLR-style controls and features; versatility and value for money.

Cons: Small sensor size limits the quality (with some key exceptions); detail often quite soft at full zoom; autofocus systems rarely match DSLRs for responsiveness.

Read: Best bridge camera: the top DSLR-style, superzoom cameras reviewed

A high-end compact is perfect for quality-conscious enthusiasts who want a ‘proper’ camera small enough to fit in a coat pocket.

Where bridge cameras deliver the most bang for your buck, a high-end compact camera offers a different route towards better pictures. Here, you’re not paying for a huge zoom range, but for a larger sensor, a better lens, DSLR-style controls and features and (sometimes) DSLR picture quality.

High-end compact cameras are designed for enthusiasts and experts who want a camera small enough to carry round when a regular DSLR would just be too intrusive or impractical.

The zoom range is nothing special – it’s about the same as you’d get in a regular point-and-shoot model, with some opting for a fixed focal length – but combined with a bigger sensor, better lens and more advanced controls, you can expect image quality to be on a completely different level from your smartphone or point-and-shoot compact.

At one time, most high-end compacts had 1/1.7-inch sensors just a little larger than those in point-and-shoot cameras, but now there are models with larger 1-inch sensors (see the Canon G7 X II and Sony RX100 IV) and even Micro Four Thirds (Panasonic LX100) and APS-C sensors (Fuji X70) – the same size as those in some compact system cameras and DSLRs.

Fuji X70

Pros: DSLR features and DSLR-approaching quality in a pocket-sized camera.

Cons: Even the cheapest aren’t cheap, and the most expensive really are expensive; you can’t change lenses.

Read: Best compact cameras

Digital SLRs offer big sensors and interchangeable lenses, and they mark the first step into ‘serious’ photography.

DSLRs are still considered the number one choice for ‘serious’ photographers, and they make great cameras for students too because they teach all the basic principles of photography without costing a fortune.

A DSLR is fundamentally different to the cameras covered so far because you can swap lenses. This is where digital cameras split into two main types.

So far we’ve been looking at so-called ‘compact’ cameras, though it would be more accurate to call them ‘fixed lens’ cameras, since they’re often far from compact! This includes point-and-shoot cameras, action cameras, travel zooms, bridge cameras and high-end compacts.

But the second type is ‘interchangeable lens’ cameras, which is where you get into DSLR territory (and compact system cameras – more on these shortly).

Being able to change lenses really opens up a whole new world of photography. DSLRs often come with ‘standard’ zooms, or ‘kit’ lenses, which cover an everyday range of focal lengths, but you can also get telephotos, super-wideangle lenses, macro lenses for extreme close-ups, fisheye lenses and fast (wide aperture) prime lenses for atmospheric defocused backgrounds.

DSLRs are perfect for anyone who wants to take their photography more seriously, not just because you can change lenses, but because they have large APS-C sensors that deliver much better quality than the smaller sensors in most compact cameras. You also get full manual controls, the ability to shoot raw files and an optical viewfinder that gives you a bright, clear view of the scene in front of the camera.

Canon 1300D

Pros: Interchangeable lenses; full manual controls; raw files; APS-C sensor for a big step up in quality.

Cons: Big and bulky compared to most compact cameras; focusing in ‘live view’ on the rear screen is comparatively sluggish on most models.

Read: 10 best DSLRs you can buy right now

Mirrorless ‘compact system cameras’ also take interchangeable lenses and they’re a new and fascinating alternative to DSLRs.

Until recently, the DSLR design was the only choice for photographers who wanted interchangeable lenses – but it has its drawbacks. The optical viewfinder on a DSLR is great, but if you want to use the LCD display to compose your shots, just like you would on a compact camera, they’re much less effective. That’s because to do this a DSLR has to flip up its mirror and swap to a slower, more laborious autofocus system.

So camera makers have introduced a new breed of ‘mirrorless’ cameras, also known as ‘compact system cameras (CSCs). These are just like supersized compact cameras, but with bigger sensors and interchangeable lenses, just like DSLRs. The absence of a mirror means that the cameras can be made both smaller and lighter, and the latest models use new and more sophisticated autofocus systems that put them on a par with DSLRs.

All mirrorless cameras let you compose images on the rear screen with no loss of autofocus performance. Indeed, on many mirrorless cameras this is the only way to take pictures, because cheaper models don’t have viewfinders.

It’s worth paying the extra for a camera with a viewfinder, though, because these can be invaluable in bright light, where the glare can easily swamp the screen on the back. On a mirrorless camera, though, the viewfinder is electronic rather than optical. Electronic viewfinders can show you the image exactly as the sensor will capture it, but many still prefer the optical clarity of a DSLR viewfinder.

For the time being it looks as if DSLRs and mirrorless cameras will co-exist. Neither type is better than they other – they’re really on a parallel path – so it really comes down to which type you prefer.

Fuji X-T10

Pros: Small and light; mechanically simpler than DSLRs; full time ‘live view’ with fast autofocus.

Cons: Some models don’t have viewfinders; electronic viewfinders lack the clarity of a DSLR’s optical system; so far, the range of lenses available is more limited, but is growing.

Read: 10 best mirrorless cameras of 2016

Moving up to a full-frame camera brings a modest increase in quality and a big increase in price, so make sure it’s worth it.

Most ‘amateur’ DSLRs and compact system cameras use APS-C size sensors. These are many times larger than the sensors in the average compact camera and deliver the kind of quality needed by professional photographers – or very nearly.

Although many professionals are perfectly happy with the quality they get from an APS-C format camera, it’s more likely they’ll go for a ‘full-frame’ camera (the frame is the same size as old 35mm film). These have sensors twice as large again as APS-C and deliver a further improvement in image quality. The differences are not always obvious, but at this level any improvement is useful.

You’ll also need a full-frame camera if you want the very highest resolutions currently available – the latest holder of this record is the 50-megapixel Canon EOS 5DS.

Most full-frame cameras are DSLRs. Canon and Nikon make full-frame DSLRs aimed at serious professional users and cheaper full-frame models for advanced amateurs – so the full-frame format is not exclusively for pros.

Sony is following a different path with its full-frame A7-series compact system cameras, like the excellent Alpha 7R II. These look like regular DSLRs but they’re more compact and have electronic rather than optical viewfinders. The mirrorless design and full-time live view makes them perfect for shooting video, too, and this is growing in importance as more and more pros find themselves asked to shoot video as well as stills.

Nikon D810

Pros: Maximum quality thanks to the full-frame sensor; often designed for tough, daily use; high resolution or high continuous shooting speeds a speciality

Cons: Expensive to buy and that goes for full frame lenses, too; pro models are bulky and heavy

Read: 10 best full frame cameras

Video-enabled DSLRs have replaced pro camcorders for many videographers, but it’s mirrorless cameras which are now driving the technology forward.

Photography isn’t just about still images any more. Traditionally, video has been seen as a completely separate subject with a different set of skills, but that’s changing – and fast. It’s as easy to shoot a video on your smartphone as it is to take a still, and almost all compact system cameras and DSLRs are capable of professional quality video that makes a dedicated camcorder unnecessary.

It all depends on what you want to shoot and what you want to do with it afterwards. If you want to share movies with your friends, a smartphone is ideal and can deliver surprising quality.

Phones aren’t built to survive the rough and tumble of extreme sports, of course, but action cams are, and many TV companies use regular GoPro-style cameras to capture footage they could never have recorded with a conventional camera.

If you need to shoot commercial-quality video for your own projects or paying clients, both DSLRs and mirrorless cameras can do the job. DSLRs were the first to bring pro-quality movie modes and are still the favorites amongst pros, but mirrorless cameras are catching up and have key advantages; notably full-time live view with fast and smooth autofocus.

Panasonic GH4

The mirrorless Panasonic GH4 may have a smaller sensor than DSLRs and some other mirrorless cameras, but it’s right at the cutting edge of 4K video.

And it’s mirrorless cameras which are at the forefront of 4K video. Panasonic is pushing the idea of stills-from-movies with the likes of the GH4, and the ability to capture high-quality 8-megapixel stills at 30 frames per second as a by-product of the 4K video capability in its latest mirrorless cameras.

If you’re choosing a camera for video, the normal rules about sensor size don’t apply because even 4K video is at a lower resolution that still images. The key for video is processing power and camera design.

Right now, DSLRs are a good, conservative choice for movie makers shooting full HD, but mirrorless compact system cameras are the ones pushing back the boundaries of video, including 4K.


TechRadar: Photography & video capture news

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