D750

171 Reviews

Product 33710

$1,999.00

Features

Bring your vision to life with Nikon's first full-frame D-SLR to feature a tilting Vari-angle display and built-in Wi-Fi® connectivity. With pro-caliber video features inspired by the D810, the same autofocus and metering system used in the D4S and D810, a newly designed 24.3MP Full Frame/FX-Format CMOS image sensor and EXPEED 4 image processor, the D750 delivers a feature set unlike D-SLRs its size. A monocoque design keeps the camera remarkably slim, compact and lightweight, and a control layout based on Nikon's flagship cameras makes for comfortable, intuitive handling. The D750 will deliver superb performance.
The full-frame Nikon D750 D-SLR lens kit pairs the AF-S NIKKOR 24-120mm f/4G ED VR lens with the 24 MP D750. Utilize the 24mm wide-angle through 120mm medium telephoto for a wide variety of shooting opportunities. Whether you're shooting stills or Full HD video, the AF-S NIKKOR 24-120mm f/4G ED VR is an ideal lens for the D750.
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Average Customer Rating

5 / 5

Based on 171 Reviews

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  • 4

    if you want to change iso settings

    Posted by amirali on November 4, 2014

    if you want to change iso settings especially in manual mode when shooting from viewfinder the big main lcd turns on and the light is bothering your eyes there is no setting to turn off the main lcd completely please correct it in firmware update.
    the only thing is missing in upper lcd white balance and size indicator is gone so i cant check it as quickly as my old d90 d300s d7000 d610 bodies.

  • 4

    Chargeur de la pile et prise mâle

    Posted by Jaloise on November 4, 2014

    Je viens d´acheter le Nikon D750 (2014/11/04). Une petite déception concernant le chargeur de pile soit la prise mâle qui est indépendante du chargeur d´où la possibilité de perte. De plus, lorsque la pile est insérée dans le chargeur et le tout fixé dans une prise murale, il a tendance à fléchir vers le bas et donc à sortir de la prise murale. Une chose certaine, ce n´est pas l´invention du siècle.

  • 3

    Great Camera with a few short-term (?) challenges

    Posted by Osopeludo on October 30, 2014

    Really happy with my jump into full frame and the quality of captures the D750 provides. Tons of new features to learn and play with.

    The down side is the ability to use RAW files. There seem to be no software applications ready for this, including Capture NX-D, and it´s Picture Control Utility 2. Hopefully this is a short term issue.

    I´d recommend buying, but only after Nikon and other software providers guarantee the D750 RAW compatibility.

  • 5

    Best Yet

    Posted by CharliePhotoDog on October 26, 2014

    I had the D7100 and it was an excellent camera but I wanted more. I bought the D750 and found what I was looking for!

    There are so many good features that I could name but the most important feature is getting a great image and with the D750 that is a grand slam!

  • 5

    The D750 delivers in every aspect

    Posted by Daddio on October 11, 2014

    The user interface is right up my alley because previous bodies were D80, D7000, D7100, D610. If you are on that path, too, and are thinking of moving to FX today then D750 would be a great choice. We are very glad we did.

    We´ve had the D750 a few weeks at this point. Enough time for quite a few sporting events, family visits, and nature / landscape excursions. Indoor, outdoor, fast, slow, portrait, landscape -- D750 image quality is equal to or noticeably better than D7100 and D610 across the board with identical technique.

    The two key features making a difference for our specific needs are the advanced auto focus unit as well as the sensor arrangement. Being in focus is of utmost importance and Nikon has thrown everything they´ve got into the D750 in that regard. Gathering light is next. For the sensor / resolving power aspect, we can see absolutely no loss of resolving power between a D750 with the filter in front of the sensor and a D610, which has the filter removed. D750 wins. It seems to me the filter / no filter in front of the sensor debate is moot. This is coming from a guy who had a D7100, too. (I shoot thousands of photos). It´s tertiary compared to being in focus and using proper technique. And, at 25 megapixels moire patterns just don´t seem to be an issue, and if / when they do, I will use Photoshop. For those of you who do not use Photoshop, don´t worry I haven´t had one photo with a moire pattern yet.

    A D750 with the well regarded 28-300 FX lens and two SB-500 Speedlights (new and designed alongside D750) cover everything indoors. The D750 has commander mode built in (pocket another $400) and the new speed lights have the simplest user interface imaginable (turn the physical power knob to off, on, group A or B, done! See photo of two side-by-side, below...).

    For portraits or outdoor sports at a distance we use the 80-400. Unbeatable combo per dollar. Cannon can´t touch it.

  • 4

    great camera on a reasonable price range

    Posted by Jayanth on October 1, 2014

    One of the best camera u can upgrade a mid range DSLR to semi pro DSLR and if you are a Nikon fan and who cares more on image quality and performance trust me it´s a best one out in the market from Nikon . 6.3 fps is best when u are enjoy taking fast moving articles Nikon is going to be a serious competitor with this beautiful beast .The only thing which actually worries me is ISO I hope Nikon should take care regarding equipping high ISO in semi pro to be the leader in the market

  • 4

    good Nikon full frame...fully satisfied Camera

    Posted by uv photography on September 30, 2014

    simply surprised, i wouldn´t mind having two body these

  • 5

    Great for a jump into an FX camera

    Posted by NikonianInVermont on September 24, 2014

    I have been shooting with a D5200 for almost 2 years now. I have been looking for an opportunity to purchase a full-frame camera. The 810 was too expensive, the 610 really just didn´t do enough. I loved the rotating screen on my D5200 and was leery about spending $2000 on a camera I wasn´t satisfied with.

    This is how it compares to my D5200:

    -The very first thing that I noticed was that the shutter noise is far quieter.

    -Focus is extremely fast and accurate, exactly what I would expect out of a system they borrowed from the D800

    -The live view seems to have been retooled. I almost never used live view on my old camera. It was so slow that it was virtually unusable, 5-10 seconds waiting for the shutter to reopen made it virtually unusable in any situation. I am happy that the focusing is far faster and its ready to refire after a shot in ~1 second or less.

    -Quiet mode is still not quiet, although it is faster. In fact the regular shutter is so quiet there is almost no audible difference between it and quiet mode.

    -The grip is comfortable perfect size for my hands and i´m on the short side, it may still be a little too small for people with very large hands, the button layout is for the most party very intuitive.

    -The tilt screen feels far more durable. The downside to that is that adjusting it requires far more effort than i´m used to. You also can swing the D5200 screen out before tilting it up and down, allowing you to quickly alternate between previewing on the screen and shooting to using the viewfinder and back again without needing to change the screens angle. This screen requires you to make a commitment, switching back and forth between the two will be slow. The improved live view hopefully makes this less of a big deal.

    -The WiFi will have its place, but until it has bluetooth connectivity, you still can only use it if you are somewhere with WiFi. Great in a studio, useless in the great outdoors. I was hopeful I could use my phone as a WiFi hotspot to circumvent this, but that doesn´t work.

    -This is very minor but the BS-1 plastic piece that covers the hot shoe when no external flash or microphone attached was mysteriously missing.

  • 5

    A Home Run

    Posted by NIKONSME on September 23, 2014

    I received an email from the Manager of the local camera store and said to come in Tuesday afternoon and I could use the new D750. I took 40 photos saving to my memory card using JPEG and RAW. I like the new larger grip area, it´s deeper. The camera functions well and the sound of the shutter mechanism is sold.

    The tilt feature on the LCD panel appears to be solid. Everything looks very nice, can´t wait to see the professional reviewers and DxO results.

    What I can tell you after taking pictures with the 28-300 F3.5-5.6 G ED VR AFS lens is that the inside and outside shots were terrific. Using AUTO ISO at F6.3 I have looked at the pictures on my monitor and I am very impressed with pictures at ISO 1400, 2200, 4000, and 7200. Very very nice sharpness.