Asking for advice - baby grows, kit grows; what lens do I need next?
Hello,
First, I posted about a year ago and I was given amazing advice by this community. I can't thank you all enough. I love my kit and its been amazing photographing my family.
Now for the question; I currently shoot with a 60D. I have a 17-55 2.8, 60 macro 2.8 and a 50 1.4. My son is now 1 (thus the reason I got into photography) and as he grows I think my kit needs to grow too. I love all three lens I currently shoot with, however I feel like I may need a telephoto lens... he's almost walking:)
What lens next does the community recommend for my kit?
And, as a second question, does anyone shoot with a point and shoot camera? I was looking at the Canon Powershot s110. Again, as he grows so does the amount of stuff I need to bring, so sometimes the 60D and the kit are too much.
Any advice / recommendations are very welcome. Thank you.
Bruce
Asking for advice - baby grows, kit grows; what lens do I need next?
Hi Bruce!
They do grow fast... Our oldest just started kindergarten, it seems like yesterday she was the size of our 5-month old.
A key question is budget. That aside, and since you have a macro lens and a fast prime already, I'd be looking at a telephoto zoom lens. Options include a 70-200mm or the 70-300L (I'd not recommend the 70-300 non-L). I expect you'll mostly be using it outdoors? If so, a slower aperture may not be a show-stopper.
The 70-200/2.8L IS II is the cream or the crop, and priced accordingly. Fast aperture, IS, excellent IQ. The budget option is the 70-200/4L (non-IS) - very good IQ, around the same price and a much better choice than the 70-300 non-L.
In between sit the 70-200/4L IS and the 70-300L, and it's a tough choice between them as they both deliver great IQ and aren't very different in price. The 70-200 is lighter but physically longer (compared to the retracted 70-300), doesn't extend, is a constant f/4, and takes extenders (1.4x only if you want AF, gives a 98-280/5.6). The 70-300L gives you an extra 100mm, at the cost of a variable aperture (not a big deal unless you usually shoot in full manual mode), a stop slower at the long end (and 1/3 or 2/3 stop slower along the range), and it doesn't (really) take Canon extenders (Kenko works, but likely not worth it optically).
So, budget permitting, I'd recommend the 70-300L. It's a great travel lens, gives you a good reach, handles nicely. There's one minor handling annoyance for me, which likely won't bother you - the relative positions of the zoom and focus rings are reversed on the 70-300L compared to other L zooms (the 70-200's, 24-xx, etc.). But, their position with the zoom ring furthest out is the same as your 17-55, so you won't have to break any habits.
Good luck with your decision...
--John
Asking for advice - baby grows, kit grows; what lens do I need next?
Regarding the P&S, I had an S95 (which my 5-year old now uses), and have an S100. If you go that route, compare S100 vs. S110 pricing - they have the same sensor and lens, S110 only has slightly faster AF (still slow relative to your 60D), and the S110 *doesn't* have the ergonomic finger grip that makes the little S100 easier to hold.
I bought those two cameras because they had the largest sensor available in a camera that fits in a jeans pocket. That was before the Sony RX100 came out, and today I'd have opted for that due to the larger sensor size - a great little camera, budget permitting (it's not cheap).
But...do you need truly pocketable, or just small? If the latter is ok, consider the EOS M (if you're not in a rush, a new version is probably going to be announced relatively soon). With the 22mm pancake lens, it fits easily in a small belt pouch or coat/cargo pants pocket. Regular 18 MP APS-C sensor, IQ will match your 60D and the 22/2 is a very good lens. I picked up the kit at the $299 price a little while back, and I find myself reaching for that much more than the S100. You might set your 17-55 to 22mm for a while to see if a 22mm prime would work for you. The EF-M 18-55 IS is a pretty good lens, but IMO it eliminates the size advantage on the M + 22 setup.