After much laboring, scrimping and saving, I bought a new camera this week, the Nikon D800. This is my first professional-grade camera, and to celebrate, I also bought a new lens, the Nikkor 24-70mm.
The main difference between this new camera and the one I already have, the Nikon D7000, is the full-frame sensor. The image sensor is approximately the same size as a 35mm negative. Higher resolution, better color fidelity and superior lens compatibility are among the benefits.
This camera is a whopping 36 megapixels (compared to 12 on my D7000, and 8 on my iPhone). The detail is amazing, and you can crop and crop and crop, and still have plenty of usable photo. The downside is each RAW image is 38 megabytes in size. I have to be careful about deleting my unwanted photos or my disk space will be consumed in no time.
When I bought my D7000, I raced to the roof and shot a first photo. Well, the photo below is my very first photo with this new camera and lens. This is a 9-frame HDR looking northwest in Manhattan. If you click on the image below, you can see the full 36 megapixel photo; be warned it will take a while to load.

