07-13-2013 09:25 AM
Solved! Go to Solution.
07-16-2013 10:06 AM - edited 07-16-2013 10:07 AM
"Does anyone have experience with this lens?" Yes!
It is a fantastic lens and a very good choice. Of the lenes you have mentioned it is probably the second best, to the Canon 70-200mm f2.8 II, which, BTW, is the best lens I have ever owned.
07-14-2013 10:53 PM
07-15-2013 12:05 PM
Again, IMHO, you should stay away from any of the consumer line of lenses. You already have them!
You need to start looking at "L" glass or for instance EX in the Sigma line.
If on the other hand you are pleased with the photos you are getting right now, maybe other accessories would be more valuable to you.
The choice of shying away from crop body only lenses is yours to make but the Sigma I recommended in my first post take a backseat to very few lenses out there. Plus you can use it right now and not be waiting for something you might never do.
Buy the lenses that fits your needs now not tomorrow.
07-15-2013 08:29 PM - edited 07-15-2013 08:30 PM
07-15-2013 09:00 PM - edited 07-15-2013 09:37 PM
07-16-2013 10:06 AM - edited 07-16-2013 10:07 AM
"Does anyone have experience with this lens?" Yes!
It is a fantastic lens and a very good choice. Of the lenes you have mentioned it is probably the second best, to the Canon 70-200mm f2.8 II, which, BTW, is the best lens I have ever owned.
07-21-2013 10:59 AM - edited 07-21-2013 11:00 AM
If you are still reading this column, there seems to be some mis-information posted.
A hard concept for some to understand is the 1.6x crop factor. Although it does not change the actual focal length of a lens, it does change the “effective” focal length. No matter what you may call it a 100mm lens will act like a 160m lens on a crop body, for instance. Your 70-200mm will act like a 112-320mm. You do get free tele for nothing.
Now about lens quality, there is no doubt Canon makes some of the best lenses in the world. A best example is my 70-200mm f2.8 II. But Canon, photographers and most people know for a fact Canon does not make the best lens in every one of it's offerings. Sigma and Tamron, Leica Summicron and others make some very good glass. Some of them are at the top of their class and charts. A glowing example is Sigma's new 35mm f1.4 “Art” series lens. Tamron's 24-70mm f2.8 is also a best buy. Just for a couple examples. There are many others.
Any piece of glass you put between your camera and lens will degrade the quality of the photo. You must decide whether it is worth the effort. Remember in photography there is no free lunch. You give up something to get something. If do decide to get an extender for instance, get the one made by the lens maker.
I don't know what this has to do with car parts but it is always good to stay with a lens makers accessories. This goes for the screw on filter. I do recommend you get a Sigma UV filter for your new baby. It just makes sense to have a $35 dollar protector on the $1200 lens!?!?
I don't buy lenses for what I might sell them for in the future; I buy lenses that fit my needs, now. That certainly includes initial cost as a factor. The lens you wish you had won't take a better picture than the one you do have.
Have fun with your new "baby"!
07-19-2013 06:44 PM
Now you can get rid of all that EF-S glass in one big swoop. Aquire a Canon EF 24-105mm f4L IS USM lens, that lens will cover all you bases with good glass. Once you experience Canon "L" quality glass you will never go back. You may want to look at the Canon EF 24-70mm f2.8L II USM, or the f4 version with IS. Both are great lenses. I don't recomend a lens with out overlap of the upper and lower mm. Usually this is where the most distortion exists, so in your case I recommend the
24-105mm f4 IS USM lens. On the lower end you have the Sigma to cover that mm size. Once you decide to go full frame, you will have all the lenses you may need in your bag, as far as zooms. Oh, when you mention shooting wildlife, you better start thinking expensive. The price of those lenses will humble you. You may want to look into some extenders for your Sigma 70-200, Kenko makes pretty good ones at 1.4, and 2X. Don't think your crop factor will add you any more tele, it just adds angle of view. With a tele-extender you do get 1.4 magnification of your subject, or with 2X you will magnify by two the subject. Also, you will loose one or two f stops when using a converter. Keep in mind, putting more glass between the camera and lens will degrade the image quality. For you daylight work, be sure to add a good quality CP filter, it will remove glare from water, shiney objects and darken the blue sky.
07-14-2013 12:00 PM
The lens for you is the Sigma APO 50-150mm F2.8 EX DC OS HSM. It is a truly fantastic professional level lens. It won't break the bank as badly as the Canon. Check it out. You will love it.
You will still have some money left for some other lens, too!
You are really not upgrading if you stick in the f3.5-5.6 consumer lenses market. They simply do not compare to a lens in the Sigma EX, or Canon "L" glass catagory.
07-17-2013 03:56 AM
Aloha! I think the " best next lens" is the one you absolutely have to buy for your next project or hobby event; but only after reading as many reviews as you can and comparing the MTF charts on each lens. I bought a 16-35 F4.0 many years ago and it is just sitting there-now there is a faster version out there and I would take a great loss selling it just to take it out of my equipment bag but at the time, it was a great lens to have and recommended by many pros and magazines.
07-21-2013 01:06 AM
aloha! Besides thinking about this before you buy, and weighing the different options you might want to consider (weight, low light availability, MTF chart studies, focal length, etc) what I have always tried to do is to buy the best lens I could get for what I needed. I never bought non-"L" lenses and have never been sorry. The wait it took to accumulate the funds often gave me more time to think about it and make a commitment to my choice. It also gave canon time to come out with a new model sometimes, but one thing is for sure-you never want to purchase the same lens twice-one" L" lens later and one **bleep**ty or off brand one in the beginning. You may, as time goes by, want to upgrade the body as well, and I don't think I would want a canon top of the line body with a sigma or someother lower grade lens. Not ony that-I never mix ford and chevy parts so to speak and have never been sorry in over 25 years of taking pictures. thanks-just a thought!
PS: it is much easier to sell an "L" lens with less loss if you take care of it!!
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