View Full Version : In need of some wedding advice
viewfinder5
23rd of January 2009 (Fri), 17:44
I have been chosen to take pictures at my father-in-laws second wedding. I don't mind taking the pictures the only problem is that I'm no near professional and I'm wondering if my camera will manage the work load. I have an XTI. The only real good lens that I have is the 28-135mm USM IS and a tripod. I'm really on a tight budget and would like to buy something for my camera. What should I do?
bnlearle
23rd of January 2009 (Fri), 20:59
What's your budget?
tim
24th of January 2009 (Sat), 08:06
Rent a 17-55 F2.8 IS and a 430EX II or 580EX II flash.
viewfinder5
25th of January 2009 (Sun), 01:11
I've heard others talk about that lens and thought about renting it, so I may call around my area and see what the going rate is for lens rentals. I think I can convince my brother-in-law to lend me his 580 speedlite flash. Too bad he has no good lenses. Thanks for the advice.
randplaty
25th of January 2009 (Sun), 03:53
Rent a 17-55 F2.8 IS and a 430EX II or 580EX II flash.
agree
egordon99
26th of January 2009 (Mon), 10:52
If you have to decide between a faster lens or your existing lens and a flash, get the flash. QUICKLY learn how to take indoor bounced flash shots in all sorts of rooms/ceiling heights/etc....Good luck!
gheesom
26th of January 2009 (Mon), 17:26
17 - 55 is a must imo.
driftsider
30th of January 2009 (Fri), 21:07
how about 18-55 f3.5? thats what i have, do you think it will work?
egordon99
30th of January 2009 (Fri), 22:29
First off, the kit lens isn't f/3.5. It's f/3.5-5.6, so it gets fairly slow at the long end. If you have a external hotshoe flash and you have not-too-high ceilings to bounce off of, you may be ok, IF you know how to use flash/off-camera lighting.
If you only use the kit lens and the pop-up flash for an indoor wedding, your pictures won't look that much different/better than Aunt Susan's pictures with her little pocket camera ;)
how about 18-55 f3.5? thats what i have, do you think it will work?
Bobster
31st of January 2009 (Sat), 10:47
remember you only have f3.5 @ 18mm, you start zooming its going to change to a f5.6
sharpness on the 18-55 isn't all that either, i did a comparison for someone the other week
i didn't have my tripod at the time (lent it out to another tog) so was hand held, so the centre point actually changes slightly..
http://www.pbase.com/bob_hall/image/108127458.jpghttp://www.pbase.com/bob_hall/image/108127460.jpg
these have no extras done outside what ACR does automatically, just taken into Photoshop and then the centre cropped @ 100% - i forgot to change the 18mm to 17mm on the 17-50 shot..
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