
Salt Spring Elementary School
Students hurry back in as the recess bell rings.
Salt Spring Photographer John Cameron

Salt Spring Elementary School
Students hurry back in as the recess bell rings.

On of the perks of living on Salt Spring Island: you get to travel on roads like this. Right down the middle if you like…

2:20 pm Fernwood Pier, Salt Spring Island
An unusually bright and complete rainbow appeared for a few minutes yesterday afternoon. This was the first of a few photos.
Coming home from a trip to Ganges, I noticed a partial rainbow over St. Mary Lake, didn’t stop, but hurried through a brief rain shower down to Fernwood where there’s a bigger sky. Luckily the rainbow and a faint 2nd rainbow had waited for me and for the cell phone wielding photogs I met there.

When I went by this scene yesterday harvest was happening!
p.s. I love the way landscapes change when they are painted by fog.

Sufficient, adequate, good enough. It’s a hard concept to come to grips with.
Is the evolution of the digital camera nearing completion? Are they sufficient for most use?
The low end compact cameras are pretty much gone; smartphones have had a lot to do with that. The bigger ’35 mm’ (full frame sensor) SLR (Single Lens Reflex) cameras are now seen by many as unnecessarily complicated and heavy to pack around all day. Enter the high quality ‘mirror less camera’: much smaller, lighter and often with excellent optics and resolution—sufficient for many professional photographers at a much lower price point than SLRs. Then there are the larger ‘medium-format’ digital cameras that tend to have much better dynamic range (images have more detail in highlights and shadows; closer to what the eye and brain see). A camera body and a few lenses can set you back 50K or more–much more. But oh my, they can provide gorgeous results in the right hands…
Upgrades to digital cameras at all levels come fast and furious. When is enough, enough? Are they now good enough?
Perhaps it depends on the intended use. What do you use your camera for? Where are your images seen? On a computer screen, blog, social media, email to family, or occasional printed in a family book from a recent event or trip? Perhaps your phone is now all you need.
The above photo was taken with an iPhone while looking down toward the wet ground, no tripod, in low light, during a dog walk— without having a clue about how to use the camera. I touched the screen where I wanted to focus and swiped at a line that popped up until the image looked right to me. Click. Done. Sharp and colour correct.
Are today’s digital camera’s sufficient for most use?
Umm…yes. I’d say we’re there.
2 more from the phone, both captured in fairly challenging situations:


Photographs of Salt Spring Island and areas reachable by ferry and road (and sometimes off-road).