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The question isn't if a camera is good enough for stock. The question is if your image is good enough for stock. All cameras have their limitations, and as long as you stay within those, you can get good enough images out of most of them.I don't know how the G2 compares to the G3 but with the latter I had images accepted at Shutterstock and Fotolia. But it is quite aggressive in noise reduction, so I have to avoid large areas with a single color when I shoot for stock.
Quote from: MichaelJayFoto on October 14, 2014, 10:10The question isn't if a camera is good enough for stock. The question is if your image is good enough for stock. All cameras have their limitations, and as long as you stay within those, you can get good enough images out of most of them.I don't know how the G2 compares to the G3 but with the latter I had images accepted at Shutterstock and Fotolia. But it is quite aggressive in noise reduction, so I have to avoid large areas with a single color when I shoot for stock.That's what I noticed. Images look a little smushy from noise reduction. Wonder if there is a raw app?