I can get the Nikon's out yes with their clearer highlights with less colour-shift, and nicer grain in the shadows, assuming the JPEG slider was not on 50 out of 100.
In 1990 a camera defined the set of lenses and add-ons that you could work with. The film could be chosen independently, and it levelled image quality from a 35$ trowaway to a F5 powerhouse.
Today with the camera you buy the film. You won't be able to change it until you buy a new camera. So IMO you better buy the best film possible, and you can say a D600 to a 5DmkII is like a Velvia 100 to a no-brand generic 100 iso slide film.
What has film to do with DSLR cameras?
And no, you can't tell what camera brand was used by looking at any photo in this forum. The only way you can do that is if the person posting the photo tells what camera it is, or by looking at the exif data. Look at the Photos Of The Day.
I used my son's Nikon camera to take one of the photos below, and my Canon 7D for the other one. Can you tall my with photo was taken with the Nikon (include the model) and which one with the Canon 7D?
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