08-21-2022 05:49 PM
Hey there! I make jewelry and am looking for a true macro lens for my Canon T6. I've read so many different blogs, posts and I'm more confused than ever. I don't have thousands to spend and a new camera isn't an option at the moment. I've been getting along okay with my 50, but want to up the quality of my photos a bit. Can anyone help with some suggestion?
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08-21-2022 06:25 PM
You may want to look at the EF 65mm f/2.8 1 to 5x macro lens. It can be quite difficult to use; especially with the higher magnification settings, but that would allow for extreme closeup of fine details. If you don't need that much magnification, look at the EF 100mm f/2.8.
If using the higher magnification of the 65mm, you may need other equipment to allow you to move the camera in fine increments.
Are you doing any lighting of your work? If so, check out the working distances of the above two to ensure they could work with your setup. Or, you can look into ring flashes.
08-23-2022 09:04 AM
I do have and use the PS suite, I was just hoping to pick up better/deeper detail. My jewelry only ranges in price from $38-$300 USD so it's true, I don't want to spend the time stacking. It's really not a good use of my studio time.
08-23-2022 09:47 AM
There is also the EF-S 35mm macro that has the cute little ring light built in. It's only fault is that the working distance at 1:1 is about 3 inches from the front of the lens.
08-24-2022 05:04 PM
Long ago, my wife sold jewelry online. To photograph it, I purchased a light box that included a mount for the camera and then I used the free Canon software for remote shooting. The Canon EF-S 24mm is an inexpensive lens that works well for this and focuses at a distance of about 6 inches. The free Canon DPP will do image stack (focus compositing) if you need more depth of field. The "EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM" is more expensive, but allows one to adjust the framing to the size of the object without moving the camera. Neither of these are true macro lenses, but they work well for closeups. One may use a cell phone with the Canon app as a remote trigger or connect the camera to a computer using a USB cable and then use the free Canon EOS Utility to remotely trigger the shutter. If using the free Canon DPP software and saving raw images, then the "digital lens optimizer" will remove most small aperture diffraction blur permitting greater depth of field by using large F numbers.
I hope some of this might help.
John
08-24-2022 05:53 PM - edited 08-24-2022 05:53 PM
"If using the free Canon DPP software and saving raw images, then the "digital lens optimizer" will remove most small aperture diffraction blur permitting greater depth of field by using large F numbers."
Good call, I had not thought about that!
08-25-2022 09:56 AM
Using the lenses the OP has and adding editing software, DPP4 or PSE or full PS, is the right move. Until folks use photo editing software they do not realize its power.
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