10-17-2024 05:05 PM
I'm just perusing the storefront for lenses as I have just acquired a Canon R8. I'm looking at the Canon official lenses there's a 50 mm f 1.8 and a 24 to 105 mm f4 to 7.
Technically the 24 to 105 lens has 50 somewhere in its range, so is there any point in getting the 50 mm?
10-18-2024 04:44 PM
Ernie,
Best was a poor choice of words, the lens in question at 50mm is f5.6 wide open. I was trying to avoid the words wide or maximum with reference to aperture, it creates the same sort of confusion when describing the driving axle in a car as having a high or low ratio.
Rodger
10-18-2024 08:36 PM
Just for the heck of it, I hauled out my 50mm f1.8 and was surprised (again) by how sharp it is.
Steve Thomas
10-18-2024 11:10 PM - edited 10-18-2024 11:11 PM
One way to approach this is to ask yourself what your 24-105 fails to deliver that a 50mm lens would for your shooting needs - given all the info I gave on the differences.
10-19-2024 10:12 AM
"One way to approach this is to ask yourself what your 24-105 fails to deliver that a 50mm lens would for your shooting needs"
Bottom line. If you need, it you need it.
10-19-2024 10:20 AM
"... those of us who's first "real camera" came with a 50mm "standard" lens ..."
Absolutely, I have no doubt nostalgia has a big part in this. However truth be known a 50mm prime is a difficult FL to live with if it is all you have. A 35mm would have been and is a better FL, but the 50mm is seen to be closer to the human eye perspective and I guess that is why it was/is so popular.
Of course there are two ways to zoom. One is with your lens and the other is with your feet. Zoom lens does it for you and feet do it for a prime. I think folks tend to forget that sometimes.