It depends on how good of picture quality you want. For highest quality I would get a Canon EOS 1Ds Mark II DSLR Camera along with a Canon EF 100mm f/2.8 USM Macro Lens. If you can not get very close to your subject you might want to go with a Canon EF 180mm f/3.5 L USM Macro Lens. The best setup would cost around 9,000 to 10,000 dollars. If you do not have a huge budget I would go with a Canon EOS Digital Rebel XTi with a Canon EF-S 60mm f/2.8 Macro USM lens. Which would run around 1500 dollars. Both setups would give you higher picture quality than of a point and shoot digital camera.
There is probably no "best" camera for this purpose. The other factors involved, such as your skill at lighting, protecting the subject from wind (especially in the case of wild flowers) and so forth are more important by far than the device used to make the image -- as they are in all other photographic efforts. A good photographer will make good pictures with a cheap camera. An unskillful one will produce garbage from a Hasselblad.
The "super-zoom" cameras such as the Sony H5 (only for example) seem to give the best macro results in consumer-grade cameras because they allow you to get good magnification while remaining some distance from the subject.
For what it's worth, if I were purchasing a compact camera it would be the Canon Powershot G9. The G10 is overkill, and the resolution is pushing the capacity of the sensor.
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1234 coins
You actaully get animals by getting coins. I don't know how much coins you need for each animal, but you do get different animals as you get more coins.
yes in a fact that owl coins happen to come from Sparta
It is really not safe to place regular coins in with Christmas pudding. The coins could leach metals into the food. They can also be a chocking hazard for anyone who may get one in their mouth, especially children.
It gets you 100 coins everyday that you take a picture, but you only get coins once a day. There are also tasks that require you to take photos to get exp
Try a digital camera with its lens set to "closeup". You may need to provide some side lighting rather than using a flash, because it will help the coin's features to show up better. For small coins you'll probably need a special lens, however. I'd discuss that with a local camera dealer for ideas specific to whatever camera you own.
Various Digital assets-related activities like selling, converting digital coins to digital coins, gifting, and so on get taxed differently. Read some blogs at Netcoins Canada Exchange to learn more about digital assets tax in Canada
You have to buy them, I think why not play and have fun then buy digital money(e-coins)
Yes, a flatbed scanner can scan photos. A flatbed scanner can scan photos, maps, documents, books, and even 3 dimensional objects such as coins and other small objects.
If you are referring to coins, you can find loads of photos at a site such as www.coinfacts.com
the bank copys the bills
The Central Bank of Iceland's site has photos and descriptions (in English) of current coins in circulation here: http://www.sedlabanki.is/?PageID=273
There are groups that are online that collect anything from coins to antique posters, photos and even signs. I would suggest you look for groups to join.
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It's a set of photos of coins in various grades, designed to help collectors grade their coins by finding a graded coin in similar condition. See the related link.
In order to take photographs, you first need to repair Beluga's camera, which Sammy broke. You can find camera parts (there are ten of them) by solving puzzles. Once you have them all, you have to fit them into the camera shell, which appears as a minigame in Professor Layton's trunk. Once you have repaired it, the game instructs you on how to take photos. In certain scenes, there will be a camera icon beneath the Professor's trunk. Click on that, and you will take a photo. These photos each have three minor differences from the original scene. If you visit the camera in the Professor's trunk, you will see a photo album that contains that pictures you have already taken. The original place will be on the top screen, while the photograph will be on the bottom. You will have to pinpoint the three differences. Once you do, you can revisit the place. Two of the places that had differences in the photo will hold hint coins, while the third will have a hidden puzzle for you to solve.