08-25-2014 05:43 PM
Hey fellow photo people! I'm on the hunt for a nice but non-expensive everyday lens that will allow me to take pictures of my active 1yr old, indoor events, outdoor adventures, candids and family portraits. A second lens to give me that "bokeh" effect that I love shooting and the 3rd lens to have some fun with, like the fisheye effect.
08-25-2014 09:11 PM
08-26-2014 12:43 PM
08-26-2014 12:51 PM - edited 08-26-2014 12:52 PM
The 18-135 would be fine for everyday use; that's what it's designed for. There are better lenses, but it's fine to start. It will not give you a lot of bokeh though. For that I'd recommend a fast prime, like a 50mm 1.4 or 85mm 1.8.
All that said, why are you looking at a 70D? By the sounds of it you're realtively new to SLR photography. Is there something about the 70D that has you looking at it, or did you just choose it by the pricepoint? Unless you plan on shooting a lot of video I would actually recommend a cheaper camera, like the 700D or even the 600D, and put your money towards lenses; they will have a much greater impact on the quality of your photography than the camera.
The 6D is in a whole different league. The 'kit lens" for the 6D is the 24-105, and it will not be able to use many of the cheaper lenses.
08-26-2014 05:33 PM
Hi,
1.) I was not saying the kit lens can do bokeh. I was saying once you have the kit lens in your bag to cover all those focal lengths between 15 and 85 (or whatever), then you can get a wide aperture prime like a 50 f/1.4 and it will do your bokeh, as well as work pretty well as an everyday general-purpose "walk around" lens too.
2.) Spend money on lenses, not on camera bodies. At least at first, until you build up a nice little collection of 2-4 good lenses. They come out with a new Rebel camera body every year, and a new 70d level camera body every few years. But the lenses are only replaced with new versions every decade or two. Lots of the lenses still current in the Canon lineup are about 20 years old. The lens makes a bigger difference in the quality of the photo than the camera body does.
I don't know how much you are looking to spend, but if getting a less expensive T5i camera instead of a 70d would allow you to purchase a better lens, I would do that in a heartbeat.
The kit lenses will be just fine in good light, so something like the 15-85 will take a lot of great pictures for you. You can even make it give you some bokeh if you set up the shot right. Zoom in to the longest focal length, select the widest aperture (the lowest "f/ number) that the kit lens will give you, stand as close to the subject as possible, and position your subject so that the background is as far behind the subject as possible.
But for when you want a lot of bokeh, or when you want to shoot indoors in a room that isn't especially bright, you will benefit from a lens like the Canon EF 50mm f/1.4.
If you got a kit lens, and a 50mm prime, that would be more than enough to be off to a very very good start. Better than probably 90% of people start with. I would not try to cram any special effects lenses in at first. Learn how to shoot, learn what you like to shoot, then consider what you want for a 3rd lens.
08-26-2014 06:55 PM
@ScottyP wrote:
I don't know how much you are looking to spend, but if getting a less expensive T5i camera instead of a 70d would allow you to purchase a better lens, I would do that in a heartbeat.
OP, if you're going to get anything out of these two threads, I think this is probably the most important. I whole-heartedly agree with the above. Especially if it's the difference between only getting 1-2 lenses and getting 2-3+.
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