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Good zoom lens for 60d

Donnawr
Contributor
60D
1 ACCEPTED SOLUTION

hsbn
Whiz
It's a pretty general question. You need to indicate the zoom range, your budget, etc.
Canon wise, 16-35 F2.8L II, 24-70 F2.8L II, 70-200 F2.8L II. Those are the best Canon zoom from 16mm to 200mm.
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26 REPLIES 26

Thx for the helpful info. Flickr pics were great also

Thx so much. Very helpful

For landscape...

 

Canon 10-22mm, Tokina 12-24/4, Tokina 11-16, Sigma 10-20 (two versions), Sigma 8-16, Tamron 10-24.

 

 

For general purpose, walk-around, including some landscape....

 

Canon 17-55, Canon 15-85, Tamron 17-50 (non-VC version, it's cheaper and sharper), Sigma 17-50

 

 

For wildlife...

 

Canon 100-400, Sigma 120-400, Sigma 150-500.  (70-200 is usually not long enough for wildlife.... 300mm comes up short sometimes, too)

Thanks so much. Very useful info

Wow, being "pretty new' to this is really an understatement.  Shooting wildlife is probably the most expensive subject in photography.  All the lenses will cost a pretty penny.  I think you should look at something like a Tamron 200-500mm, or a Sigma of the same size, but look at ebay and buy used.  The suggestion for you to look at a Canon EF 70-200mm f4, or f2.8 L with IS USM plus a 2X entender is good, but beware sinking about $2400 in lenses is pretty steep for a novice.   Canon makes some good EF-S lenses in the 70-300mm range, that cost only $649.00.  Tamron, and Sigma also make a quality lens for the 60d in those type of ranges.  You may want to look at IS, VC, OC, these are the letter for Image stabilization for the 3 lens makers.  IS does make any lens more expensive, but it takes the guess work out when shooting bird in flight (BIF).  Should you buy a non IS lens, you will have to learn to shoot at high ISO, shutter speed, and watch your exposure.  For shooting small animals, like squirrels, rabbits, you can use less of a lens.  But, for shooting grizzly bears, you will need a really long lens.  Something like a Canon EF 800 f5.6L USM, just so you don't have to get to close.  Actually, you can rent almost any lens you may want for a week or two, and try it out.  Look at "www.lensrental.com"

Thx so much. Very helpful

Great info. Thx
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