Which lenses should I purchase? Zooms? Primes? A combination?
Has this been asked before? Yes. Yes, it has. Ok, now that that
Re: Which lenses should I purchase? Zooms? Primes? A combination?
As you mention groups and landscapes you don
Re: Which lenses should I purchase? Zooms? Primes? A combination?
Unless the IS is the must, I
Re: Which lenses should I purchase? Zooms? Primes? A combination?
For your intended purposes a zoom will work great, as David said you don
Re: Which lenses should I purchase? Zooms? Primes? A combination?
Generally, I like to encourage people to get primes (I shoot all primes myself). But in your case it seems like a zoom would be more useful. Group shots and landscapes are often f/5.6 or narrower, so you don
Re: Which lenses should I purchase? Zooms? Primes? A combination?
For landscapes I'd definitely consider the 15-85mm. The extra angle of view makes it more appealing for landscapes IMO, I have one and my favourite shots with it have all been taken at the wide end.
Re: Which lenses should I purchase? Zooms? Primes? A combination?
+1 on the 17-55mm - IMO, it's the best general purpose zoom for a crop body. At the wide end, the 17-55mm has the least barrel distortion of the three (17-55mm, 15-85mm, 18-135mm). Sharpness is similar between 17-55mm and 15-85mm (both better than the 18-135mm), and the 17-55mm has a bit less chromatic aberration.
One combination that I found very useful when starting out was the 17-55mm plus the 85mm f/1.8 for portraits (the 85/1.8 is one of the best values in the Canon lineup in terms of IQ for price). That combo would keep you under $2K, and provide a versatile, functional kit for the types of shooting you like to do.
The Tamron 17-50mm non-VC is a decent lens, altough not quite as good at f/2.8 as the Canon 17-55mm (stopped down to f/4 and beyond, the Tamron is just about as sharp, although the CA at 17mm is pretty bad). For half the price, though, it comes quite close.
Re: Which lenses should I purchase? Zooms? Primes? A combination?
Quote:
Originally Posted by JJphoto
Unless the IS is the must, I'd go with Tamron 17-55mm 2.8 non IS version and Canon 35mmL 1.4( or 24mm L prime) combo, but like David has mentioned, a 17-55mm zoom should be good enough.
If budget is indeed the deciding factor (and you're going with the Tamron), get the Sigma 30mm f/1.4 instead of the 35L. I came *this* close to getting the 24L II, but ended up buying the Sigma instead; I have never regretted that decision. The Sigma lacks nothing that is worth spending the extra $800-$1000 on the Canon, aside the from weather sealing which was unimportant to me.
Re: Which lenses should I purchase? Zooms? Primes? A combination?
I agree with you, Sean. I didn't think about that lens. I am a prime guy, but sometimes I do miss the zoom especially when photograph something not that important(like kids everyday activities which not need thin DOF). a Tamron 17-50mm2.8 plus the sigma 30mm 1.4 prime does sound a very good combo( I already have the 85mm 1.8) since both lenses have very good reviews and saving money always important part for me when decide purchasing a lens.
Re: Which lenses should I purchase? Zooms? Primes? A combination?
I am also a prime guy, my general perpose kit consists of the; MD 24mm f/2.8, FD 35mm f/2.0, MD 50mm f/1.7 and MD 70-210mm f/4. If I were to add anything to this kit would be a Samyang 14mm f/2.8 and 85mm f/1.8 or f/2.0 by Minolta or the Samyang 85mm f/1.4. I also have the MD 100mm f/4 macro and extention tubes, which is a lot of fun!
Joihn.