Re: Newbie..zooming question
It sounds like you are zooming digitalyin live view mode. Your real zoom is in the lens, you adjust it by twisting the zoom ring on the lens.
Re: Newbie..zooming question
What Jarhead said. To start off look through the veiw finder and zoom with the lens until you get what you like then use live view and manual focus at 5 or 10X zoom. You picture will still be at the distance you zoomed with your lens though.
Re: Newbie..zooming question
It almost sounds as if you're trying to zoom by pressing the magnification key instead of turning the zoom ring on the lens.
The magnification key in live view gives you a close up of the picture you are about to take. It doesn't *change* the picture you're about to take.
The way to zoom is to turn the ring on the lens itself.
Re: Newbie..zooming question
Oh, i thought maybe i could use the magnification to get an even closer shot. If you go to this site, and scroll down to the 3 pictures of the clock....how can this person, with the same lense get such a close picture of the clock?
http://www.digicamreview.com/canon_eos_450d_rebel_xsi_dslr_review.htm
thank you for the help!!
keller
Re: Newbie..zooming question
I think that is just a crop of the big picture.
Re: Newbie..zooming question
Again, thank you very much for all your help.
One more question...If i do want to capture that picture of my child listening to the coach in a huddle across the soccer field (and i do want to) what would be the best lense to capture this picture. Oh yes, on a budget!
I guess i should say, cheap, but yet a good lense....if that is possible.
keller
Re: Newbie..zooming question
canon 75-300 4-5.6 or canon 55-200 IS
Re: Newbie..zooming question
To get the same shot as using a 10x magnification, you'll need a lens with 10x more reach than your current 55mm. There are no cheap options to get you a 550mm lens, but there are some cheap options to get you somewhere close, and with a bit of cropping (there's no way your monitor is 12 megapixels) it'll look like the same thing.
The only somewhat cheap lens that I'd really recommend to someone is the 70-200... I would try to convince them to save until they can afford the image stabilized version (nearly twice the price). If the non-IS version is the most you can afford, then go for that one. If that's out of your price range, consider then 100-300mm . If that's too rich for you, drop down the the 55-250mm. I don't think anything else in the low-end price range is worth even considering...
If you don't mind the lack of versatility of a prime lens (no zoom), the 200mm f/2.8 is an awesome lens for just a bit more than the 70-200 f/4.
Perhaps someone will back all that up, or tell you that I'm all wrong. ;) That's all based on reviews here (and elsewhere, but mainly here) for the cheapest telephoto zooms. I'm still saving for my entry to DSLR land, so I've yet to actually use ANY of these lenses.
edit: Perhaps also consider the 18-200mm EF-S lens. You could sell your 18-55 to help offset the cost, and you get to keep yourself down to a single lens. The quality isn't as good as the 70-200, but is (as far as I can tell) better than your kit 18-55mm. You do get image stabilization, which the low-end 70-200 doesn't give you.
Re: Newbie..zooming question
I think it would be great if Canon offered a digital zoom option, it could save file space and even be setup as a "metadata crop" for raw shooters.
In the mean time, I suggest the 55-250 lens. For the price it can't be beat.