Why I Still Use the Nikon D3 and D3S in 2025
- Ian Miller
- Jul 5
- 1 min read
In an age of mirrorless marvels and AI-enhanced everything, I still reach for two cameras released over a decade ago: the Nikon D3 and D3S. Not out of nostalgia, but because they still deliver—quietly, reliably, and with a kind of tactile honesty that newer gear often lacks.
Built Like Tools, Not Toys

The D3 and D3S were Nikon’s first full-frame DSLRs, and they were built like they meant it. Magnesium alloy bodies, weather sealing, and a shutter rated for 300,000 actuations. These cameras were made for war zones, not weddings. And yet, they’ve handled both with grace.
I’ve used them in the heat of Phnom Penh’s markets, on the water at Tonlé Sap, and in quiet moments with people whose stories deserve dignity. They’ve never flinched.
The Files Still Sing
Yes, they’re “only” 12.1 megapixels. But those pixels are rich, clean, and full of tone. The D3S in particular still surprises me with its low-light performance—ISO 6400 feels like ISO 800 on some modern sensors. And the colour rendering? It’s got soul. Not sterile perfection, but something closer to memory.
Speed and Simplicity
9 fps on the D3, 11 fps on the D3S. Autofocus that locks on like a bloodhound. No menus buried in submenus. No touchscreen distractions. Just a camera that lets me stay present, anticipate, and respond.

Why I Still Carry Them
Because they don’t get in the way. Because they’ve become extensions of how I see. Because they remind me that photography isn’t about megapixels or marketing—it’s about presence, patience, and purpose.
And maybe most of all, because they’ve earned my trust.
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