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Quite honestly, for Web use almost any modern digtal camera will give you the technical quality you need. What it can't give you is skill in composition, lighting and design. If you're already an experienced amateur photographer then switching to digital is easy. All your existing knowledge of taking pictures can be applied in the same way as a film camera.
I spent half my life as a professional photographer (I'm cured now) and so I'm probably a bit over-sensitive to picture faults. However, so often I see pictures in sales material, including Web sites, that make me cringe. I'm not talking about exposure and focus problems, just failure to put the camera in the right place and to get the lighting right.
By all means get a digital camera; my present one is a Canon that cost about €200. Don't be impressed by lots of megapixels, you don't need them for the Web. Spend a few more on a tripod. Don't use flash unless you really have to.
Take lots of pictures for your Web site and pick the ones that really show what you want to say. Look at them critically and ask if each one really sells whatever it shows. Should the camera have been a bit higher, further back, whatever?
Once you've done all this in the context of your Web site go off and look at a few sites for similar places. How does yours stack up? If you can honestly say that it's as good as the best of the competition then you've done it, otherwise go & get a professional and use your pictures to help brief him/her.
Finally, don't forget that images need resizing for Web use. The minimum resolution on my camera produces big files that will take a long time to load on a dial-up connection.
Have fun. If I can help then email me. I often fail to see PMs.
Albert the InfoGipsy
"So welcome to the Citadel where the question is 'Am I?'"
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