I just now saw the thread. People who want to make a few bucks with a thousand-dollar camera setup are driving prices down for the entire profession in most fields of photography. They don't know what they are doing, but cameras have gotten so good, they can get a marginally good image just by putting the camera in Program mode, and shooting, and they do it for pennies. They use the wrong settings and color gammuts, and don't understand file formats, or what the difference between 16-bit color and 8-bit color -- assuming their cheap "kit" camera and lens can even capture 16-bit color.
When I worked for magazines, I can't tell you how many hours I spent fixing images submitted by photographers just wanting to make a few extra bucks. I wish I had a dime for every time I told someone, "Nice composition, but I can't publish this."
As for a camera package for a thousand bucks for real professional photography, good luck. I paid five-grand for my camera body -- that's without a lens. A thousand bucks might get you a good used lens on eBay.
I also own Adobe Creative Suite on a Mac platform. That's the industry standard. Yes, professional photographers DO use photoshop. It's $1,300 for pros, but as a student, she can get it for about 400 bucks.
So, sorry to be the wet blanket, but photography is a profession I love, and I love to help young "professionals." But, unless I know the young photographer is really serious about the profession, my advice is "please don't help erode the profession I love." Do it right, or don't do it at all.
CD
www.gzphoto1.com