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My First Digital Camera
By Robert Provencher
My first camera was a Canon D30. It shot sRGB files and produced 3.2 or something like that megapixel file sizes. As if file size really mattered.
I used a 50MM Canon 1.4 lens, and a Nikon 105MM lens that I would use by adding an adapter I purchased for $80.00 from some guy in New York, off Ebay. Hey, crude, but it worked!
Here's a few samples that I just dug up, from back in 2001. I shot A LOT of babies, families and weddings with that camera, until it drowned in a lake, after I accidentally dropped it in front of 20 people all posed up on a dock.
I have hundreds and hundreds of sessions just like these examples below. I shot with my little dinky D30 for almost 9 months, producing thousands of digital exposure for weddings, families and baby and child portraits. It made us well over $200,000.00 in sales.

Above: 2001 These folks ordered a ton. They have a 20" x 30" wall print. They own several restaurants in our city, and even let me display on their walls. 3.2 MP file, JPEG.
ABOVE IS STRAIGHT OUT OF THE CAMERA
Above: 2001 Typical of many of the baby sessions I create every year. This baby is 2 days old, dad and mom, both surgeons with specialties. Repeat clients, excellent referrals. They have four kids. Above is the original, from the camera. I have produced 30" wall hangings from this file. 3.2 MP file, JPEG.

ABOVE: Workflowed color version.

ABOVE: Workflowed B&Wversion.

Above: 2001 These folks ordered a ton as well. They have several 20" x 30" wall prints
and various other sizes. The couple on the right, both family docs, shot their wedding about
a month after this shoot, and currently shooting their second baby, who is on our babies first
year wall panel program.
They received a free session for booking their wedding with me.
The man on the left, surgeon, the parents in the middle, both retired after a long successful
career as an exec.
3.2 MP file, JPEG.

Same family, dif pose.

Above and below: More wall hangings, same year, same story

"It's not the file size that counts, but what you do with it."
James Hodgins






