Canon Starter Kit for Canon DC10, DC20, DC22, DC40, DC50, DC220 & DC230 Camcorders

Quantity:
Product Description:

Includes camcorder bag, battery, DVD & Mini SD Card
Product Details
  • Binding: Electronics
  • Brand: Canon
  • EAN: 0750845826685
  • IsAutographed: 0
  • IsMemorabilia: 0
  • Label: Canon
  • Manufacturer: Canon
  • Model: DVD Starter Kit
  • MPN: DVD Starter Kit
  • PackageQuantity: 1
  • ProductGroup: Photography
  • ProductTypeName: CAMERA_OTHER_ACCESSORIES
  • Publisher: Canon
  • Studio: Canon
  • UPC: 750845826685

Customers who bought this item also bought

Customer Reviews

Quality all the way2008-03-06
This carrying case and accessories are top quality and helps to keep the camera and accessories safe and secure.
Just right2006-08-26
This bag and kit is just what the DC20 needs. The bag is well built and designed--has a place for easy storage of batteries, CDs, miniSDs, etc. and the manual (which you need for a while). Good price.
Good Deal2006-07-21
Nice bag and great price. Note that if you own the Canon DC100 DVD camcorder, you will be getting a mini-sd card that you don't need. This camcorder does not have an SD slot. It is still such a good price for all the other stuff that it comew with that it may not matter.

Electronics Articles

Digital cameras are good for the environment
As we consider the digital camera revolution that has taken place over the last decade, most people think about it in terms of enhanced benefits for consumers. We can take a lot more pictures at much lower cost with digital cameras versus film cameras. We can also more easily manipulate and share those photos since they're all in the digital realm. But one thing many people don't think about actually deserves mention as potentially the most profound effect of the digital camera revolution: how digital cameras greatly reduce the destructive impact on the environment compared to film cameras. At first, you might think, "How can that be? My film camera didn't harm the environment!" Even though it wasn't your camera that harmed the environment, your film processing did indeed harm it. Any time you take your pictures to a photo processing center, that film is run through batches of chemicals. These chemicals are environmental hazards, and once they are used to process film, those chem ...
Camera basics: shutter-speed, aperture and ISO
In this article, I’ll introduce you to the basic elements that you can use to control exposure in your shooting. If you have a digital SLR, there will be a way to set all of these controls on your camera, but since they differ between manufacturers and models, you’ll need to refer to your camera’s manual to find out exactly how to change them. All cameras, whether an ancient film camera, or a more modern digital, work in pretty much the same way. Photographs are taken by letting light fall onto a light-sensitive medium, which records the image. Traditionally, this has been film, but more recently, it tends to be a digital sensor. The more light that falls onto the film or sensor, the lighter the image. Put simply, a camera consists of a light-tight box that stores a light-sensitive device (either a film or a digital sensor), a lens that magnifies and focuses the image onto that light-sensitive device through a hole in the box (called the aperture) , and a shutter that opens ...