I agree that any modern digital camera can make great photos and that the photographer is, as always, 90% of the image. I go back to first using my folks Brownie Hawkeye with 620 film in the early 1950's which took relatively poor quality photos compared with a cheap phone camera now. I've been editing a lot of scans of them using AI technology to recover blurry faces. My first Camera was an Argus C3 in the 1960's. The Kodachrome II slides I took with it are still in great condition, but the images don't match what my phone takes. A few years later, I bought a Canon FT QL with the kit 50mm lens, but I don't know what became of the negatives from 55 years ago. They are packed away somewhere. I have prints but would like to scan the negatives. There are some color polaroid ones as well. I need to scan what's left of the fading images, the color polaroids were quick and easy but not archival. The black and white ones are fine....
I have also seen entire BROADCAST TELEVISION commercials being shot on iPhone! So long you have good lighting and good cinematography and post producting imaging skills, ANY CAMERA can be used to make spectacular still photo and video images!
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