View Full Version : Lenses for my new 20D
E
1st of October 2004 (Fri), 20:49
Hi Folks!
I stumbled across this great forum a couple of days ago and wanted to get some pearls of wisdom...
I just got my 20D kit (w/ the 18-55 lens) and want to start seriously buying into the Canon line. I am in the position to spend $1,000-$1,500 for the first purchase (1+ lenses). I will then be able to buy more as I sell off my old system. (Manual Contax 35mm with Zeiss lenses)
My interest from photography stems from a fantastic trip to the Southwest where I took a number of landscape shots that looked good to me. Since then, my interest has been nature, primarily landscapes. I recently rented a 10D for wildlife photography in Glacier Bay and decided to convert to Canon. Eventually, I want to have a line of lenses to cover these subjects.
However, my immediate need revolves around taking pictures of my twins that will be born in the next month.
Considerations:
1. I read that the focus array works best with lenses with a maximum aperture of at least F2.8.
2. I am a stickler for quality.
Any advice you would have on a first (and following) purchase(s) would be greatly appreciated.
:)
Persian-Rice
1st of October 2004 (Fri), 21:08
17-40(landscape), 70-200(wildlife) and a 50 1.8/1.4(****s n' giggles)
Should be around $1300-$1500 if you are a smart buyer and are willing to shop around.
Quality in all 3 lenses are very hard to beat. I dont think anyone one can argue against Canon's L lenses or their 50 mm primes.
Cheers
E
2nd of October 2004 (Sat), 06:18
Thanks for the insights, the posts I have read highly recommend each of these lenses!
When I sell my other system, I should come up with another $1,500-$2,000 in the next month or so. Given this, I was not going to try to do everything at once. This round of buying is purely dedicated to taking pictures of the upcoming newborns.
mmartinfan
2nd of October 2004 (Sat), 07:13
what about a 24-70L ????? not as wide and a bit longer.
Hellashot
2nd of October 2004 (Sat), 07:51
You might want to try the new 10-22mm EF-S that just came out. I've seen it one place for $700. But it is an f3.5-5.6 I think.
Hellashot
blinking8s
2nd of October 2004 (Sat), 09:42
i'll second Persian-Rice
CyberDyneSystems
2nd of October 2004 (Sat), 10:36
3rd...
...And I would take recomendations for lenses that no one has used yet with a grain of salt to be on the safe side. :wink:
Persian-Rice
2nd of October 2004 (Sat), 16:52
3rd...
...And I would take recomendations for lenses that no one has used yet with a grain of salt to be on the safe side. :wink:
Ditto, I think the 10 mm is great for wide angle, but it comes up leaving a huge gap if you go 70-200.
the 24/28-70 is great, but costly.
E
2nd of October 2004 (Sat), 20:22
Thanks for all of the feedback!
It seems like the 50mm and the 24-70mm are great choices. I just have to decide between prime and zoom. (and the money I am willing to spend)
Something to sleep on... I will let you know which way I go.
DeeplyDigital
3rd of October 2004 (Sun), 02:26
4th...
timmyquest
3rd of October 2004 (Sun), 02:29
what about a 24-70L ????? not as wide and a bit longer.
Not as wide, and a lot more money :?:
Olegis
3rd of October 2004 (Sun), 04:30
the 50mm and the 24-70mm are great choices. I just have to decide between prime and zoom. (and the money I am willing to spend)
If you decide to go with the 24-70 range, you may want to try the Tamron 28-75 f/2.8 Xr Di - it offers very fine optical quality for about 2.5 times less than the Canon 24-70 f/2.8L. The AF speed and the build quality is not really up to Canon L series, but for about $370 it's very acceptable.
danphoto1
3rd of October 2004 (Sun), 07:42
If you have the money You will not beat the quality and the sharpness of the 24-70 2.8 Canon It is the closest that you will come to a prime. I also really like for a wider angle the Sigma 14mm 2.8 and the sigma 20mm 1.8. all of there lenses are great and sharpGreat lenses produce grat photographs I know I read that some where and I am tending to beleive it more and more. :)
Johnny Bravo
3rd of October 2004 (Sun), 21:04
17-40(landscape), 70-200(wildlife) and a 50 1.8/1.4(****s n' giggles)
Should be around $1300-$1500 if you are a smart buyer and are willing to shop around.
Quality in all 3 lenses are very hard to beat. I dont think anyone one can argue against Canon's L lenses or their 50 mm primes.
Cheers
I'd get the 17-85 (the new 'kit' lens) (although I have the 17-40 and it's a fabulous lens, I just don't use it that often), give a definate 'dittos' on the 70-210, and gasp in amazement that anyone would spend real dollars on a 50.
Jon
4th of October 2004 (Mon), 07:19
The 70-200 is a good lens, but you'll find it is usually too short for wildlife, whether birds or mammals. You really need something going to around 400 for that (and the 100-400 will blow the budget right there!). Adding the 1.4X TC will help with that as a stopgap.
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