> As im researching now it seems to me that to make decent photos i need atleast a $1000 camera. 

So sayeth the gear collectors. Photographers are out shooting, and say otherwise. Many of us, myself included, still shoot film on vintage rigs. I've also shot with digital since ~2004 and my current digital camera is a 5Dmk2, released in 2008!

Here's an image that I took with said 5Dmk2 (click to enlarge):

[![enter image description here][1]][2] 

This image was made by bouncing a 430EXII strobe off the ceiling (handheld) while using a 70-200 f/4 with some amount of extension tube. 

So, there you have it. A sharp image taken by a camera from 2008 using a lens from 1999. Gear valued at ~$1K total today.

> I'm getting into photography and got myself a used canon 1200d with **tamron 12-200 lens**.

There's your problem right there, lad. The lens maketh the photo. 

There isn't any reason that you couldn't use the 1200D to make some stellar images. But that 12-200mm Tamron is not helping you. 

In short, all lenses make design sacrifices. Key pillars here are image quality, speed (aperture), size, cost, and ability or amount to zoom. 

SuperZooms that cover a massive range, like your Tamron, prioritize the zoom range at the expense of image quality and aperture speed. 

In general, try to avoid zooms that go over 3x. Pro lens groups are along the lines of 16-35 (~2x), 24-70 (~3x), 70-200 (~3x). You don't *have* to use lenses like this but start to become aware of the tradeoffs that the lens designers made in creating the design and **start to pick attributes that mean a lot to you**. 

For example, I personally prioritize image quality and aperture (speed) and am constrained by cost (aren't we all?). This has led me to obtain and use the following lenses:

 - 16-35 f/4 (landscape lens) (~$1000)
 - 50 f/1.8 II (~$100)
 - 100 f/2 (~$500)
 - 70-200 f/4 (~$550)
 - 300 f/4 (~$700 used)
 - 400 f/5.6 (~$1000 used)

Now, this is *my* kit. Many others here have vastly different kits. It is true that you can get sharp glass for cheap (like the 50mm), but the sacrifice there is in the fact that it's a prime lens (no zoom). 

You need to start getting a feel for what **you** prioritize in a lens. But, I will say...if supreme image quality is up there, then be very, very careful when looking at super zooms as the vast majority won't measure up at all and of those that do, they'll only measure up for a limited amount of the focal range and only after being stopped down a tad. 

  [1]: https://i.sstatic.net/sFPNZm.jpg
[2]: https://i.sstatic.net/sFPNZ.jpg