Use the best equipment you can afford; but not to the extend of neglecting your profit margin. Most important is to be able to cover your investments & costs and make money.
im curious as a paid photographer what kind of body do you prefer ? lets say you have a choice of d700 and d300 which will you pick?
im curious as a paid photographer what kind of body do you prefer ? lets say you have a choice of d700 and d300 which will you pick?
Full-Frame bcoz you'll never know when you'll be prompted by your clients on "I heard that Full-Frame Dlsr produce the best details in a pic" <--> some clients really know:bigeyes:about this issue ok, I'm talking serious, no jokes here! Believe it or not, it's up to individual! In fact, it true coz once I was prompted with "Do you use Full-Frame DSLR...(here the 'you' refers to one of 'my client' asked/chat while I was doing set-up...! My reply was my 5D went to CSC-Sensor-cleaning so using my 30D(as backup) and this was before and how I purchased my Nikon D3!! (of coz, not fetching in medium &/or big format cams here...)
Could ask the client if the they have any concern on full frame vs crop, hear them out. Educate them if need be, show them your master piece. May be they like your work, the client can come to understand that photos are not all about bokeh
My reply was my 5D went to CSC-Sensor-cleaning so using my 30D(as backup)
Glad that your client don't know that sensor cleaning in CSC don't usual take more than a few hours.
Glad that your client don't know that sensor cleaning in CSC don't usual take more than a few hours.
If you are doing a commercial assignment like magazine cover, you will not even consider a full frame.