Originally Posted by Keith B
Keith. As soon as you're able, you need to treat yourself. We all need you to treat yourself []
Nevermind, I just scrolled down and saw that you did. Good for you! *high five*
Originally Posted by Keith B
Keith. As soon as you're able, you need to treat yourself. We all need you to treat yourself []
Nevermind, I just scrolled down and saw that you did. Good for you! *high five*
Yeah I caved. I was tired of you taunting me.
I cleared of my Bill Me Later account and took the plunge. I've only shot about 20 shots with it goofing around but I'm already in love. I don't think I ever take it off 1.4.
It is so much better than my 40D/24 1.4 combo. The bokeh is so much smoother and the images are way sharper.
<p style="CLEAR: both"]You're welcome!Originally Posted by Keith B
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Flexibility i would go for 24-70mm
You will get better bokeh with the 24-70 over the wider angle any day of the week. It has a minimum focal distance of close to 1ft which will be great for your detail shots also. It is a great lens and you will love it.
I always have the EF24-70mm f/2.8 L USM on the 5D MKII at weddings. I noticed a couple of folks say they use primes at weddings, but for me, that's just a beating.I spend too much time moving to fix composition with prime lenses and for the most part my EF50mm f/1.4 only gets used on the tripod when I'm doingfixedproductshots.
For studio portraits off the tripod, the prime may be a nice lens, but I still like to recompose with the zoom.
My wedding set-up right now is as follows:
1D MKII with EF70-200mm f/2.8L IS USM
5DMKII with EF24-70MM f/2.8 L USM
50D with EF300mm f/4.0 L USM (tripod camera for the ceremony)
Dallas,
Does that 50D + 300 f/4 combo with its associated 480mm EFL allow a full body portrait from the back of the church?
Zoom flexibility is great, but not as important asaperture flexibilityin my opinion. I would go for the 35L on a cropped sensor.
On a side note I got a 5D Mark II and with the 85mm 1.2L it really is great for portrait (but autofocus is not that great, slow + struggling in low light). I am hardly using my zoom lenses anymore (17-40L, 24-70L, 70-200L IS).
I have to admit it's a question of taste as well.
I sold my 24-70L in favor of the 35L and 85L I purchased a while back, which together see 95% of the use for any given wedding. The 24-70L only got used for macro shots and sometimes the cake cutting. If I still need a zoom I can bring out my old Tamron 28-75.
The 24-70 is a good lens for many things, but it's not a great lens for anything I do. it's also big and heavy.
If I wasnot doing professional work I would probablyconsider the Sigma 30mm for crop sensor cameras because of price.Nowadays, Ioften want a 24L to get wider than my 35L (I use full frame and crop sensor). The 24L will probably be my next lens.
Originally Posted by HiFiGuy1
Off the balcony at University Christian in Fort Worth, yes, but it depends on the size of the venue. I usually use the 300 regardless of the framing and supplement with the other cameras if I can't get a ful portrait.
For some reason, my non-IS copy of the EF300 f/4.0 L is ridiculously sharp. It really rivals the copy of the EF400 f/2.8 L IS USM that I use. I end up using the 300a lot because of the WOW image quality.