I'm interested in tires. Whenever someone at work is in need of tires I'm always excited to go on the website of my favorite local Discount Tire, tell them what to get, and sent them there and tell them to tell Chris I sent them.
I never recommend cheap tires. Not that I wouldn't get them for a car I was temporarily driving, occasionally driving, or selling, but I wouldn't want to be responsible for a blowout. I know I wouldn't be, but some of those $50 tires are really flimsy if you feel them not pumped up.
The first question is tire size. 14-15s? Might as well bite the bullet and grab Michelins. For your 2006 Camry, the Michelin Defenders at Discount Tire are $112. I have these in 14s on my Camry. 90,000 mile warranty and I'd say best all around. $550 installed is not bad. They have Michelins which cost up to $150, but you're not racing and plus they wear faster. Other high end tires might be good too, but I've learned to not waste time trying other brands: Michelin and forget it.
Next are some of my favorites to recommend for larger wheels: Falken. You can feel the build quality is not like Michelin or some of the other higher end tires, but they are a good medium build and not flimsy. They're very attractive and have intersting patterns. Pricing is fair. For your car, you can get the same tires my boss bought TODAY: Falken Pro G4 A/S for $88 each. Asymmetrical and look pretty mean. I'd personally prefer the Falken Sincera SN-828, however, because they're only $74 each, have been around a bit longer (in my area at least), and are known to work well. As a note, I don't mind asymmetrical tires and would
consider getting them, but I'd never get directional tires. Better wet traction maybe, but fewer rotation options.
Let us know what you get...and pics!