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FORUMS Cameras, Lenses & Accessories Canon Lenses 
Thread started 06 Mar 2011 (Sunday) 17:04
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POLL: "What is the main reason for paying more for a lens"
Aperture
72
40%
Sharpness
67
37.2%
Color rendition
3
1.7%
Focus speed and accuracy
25
13.9%
Resale value
4
2.2%
Build and weathersealing
9
5%

180 voters, 180 votes given (1 choice only choices can be voted per member)). VOTING IS FOR MEMBERS ONLY.
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Why do you pay more for a lens

 
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Mar 06, 2011 17:04 |  #1
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So what is the single main reason you decided to pay for times more for an "L" lens ?




  
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JeffreyG
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Mar 06, 2011 17:09 |  #2

Highly dependent on the specific lens, but usually it is for features:

70-200/2.8 II and 24-70/2.8 - I specifically wanted the f/2.8 aperture in these focal lengths combined with ring-USM and, in the case of the 70-200, IS.

100-400 - I wanted this range with ring-USM and IS.

24-105L - The range mostly, plus ring-USM and IS.

16-35/2.8 II - I wanted f/2.8 in an UWA, plus ring USM.

50L - Pretty much for ring USM. I've used Canon's other 50mm lenses and found the AF performance to be inaccurate.

There are no alternate Canon brand lenses for any of the above with the features I wanted. There are some third party alternates (24-70/2.8 and 70-200/2.8 in particular), but I did not choose these.


My personal stuff:http://www.flickr.com/​photos/jngirbach/sets/ (external link)
I use a Canon 5DIII and a Sony A7rIII

  
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gonzogolf
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Mar 06, 2011 17:10 |  #3

All of the above.




  
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hieu1004
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Mar 06, 2011 17:11 |  #4

gonzogolf wrote in post #11968552 (external link)
All of the above.

Ditto


-Hieu
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GooseberryVisuals
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Mar 06, 2011 17:14 |  #5

For me, it's a combination of these.

You can fake a lot of the L lenses benefits if you have a cheaper lens with photoshop (color, sharpness, bokeh, contrast, distortion) but you can't fake focusing speed, build quality or resale value.




  
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caiguar
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Mar 06, 2011 17:18 |  #6

+1 accuracy is the most important thing. everything else can be fixed except soft pictures.


http://www.35mme.com (external link)
Canon 50D, Olympus Zuiko 50mm f/1.4

  
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macroshooter1970
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Mar 06, 2011 17:22 |  #7

sharpness




  
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gasrocks
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Mar 06, 2011 17:25 |  #8

Sharpness is a no brainer after a while.


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grafish
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Mar 06, 2011 17:25 |  #9

gonzogolf wrote in post #11968552 (external link)
All of the above.

Same here.




  
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twoshadows
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Mar 06, 2011 17:44 |  #10

gasrocks wrote in post #11968637 (external link)
Sharpness is a no brainer after a while.

Words of wisdom :D .


xgender.net (external link) Miss Julia Grey (she/her/Miss)
The Chronochromagraph "how to" thread

  
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Overread
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Mar 06, 2011 18:11 |  #11

Sharpness - aperture - focusing speed and accuracy - build and weathersealing

Resale is mostly not a concern of mine at all - sure its nice to have lenses that keep a high resale rate, but I'm buying to use not to wheel and deal and sell. Colour is also a little less important since its more easily controlled in editing (plus the other reasons already listed lead to colour and contrast improving overall so its kind of in there as well ;)).

Of course all the above can come with downsides:
Weight - size

and I'd add them to the list as well as sometimes a more expensive, lighter option or a more expensive smaller option is worth far more to the photographer than having a cheaper; heavier/larger option.

All in all there are many things that go into the choice of a new lens - the primary choice however is that it meets the needs and the budget of the person purchasing the lens.


Tools of the trade: Canon 400D, Canon 7D, Canon 70-200mm f2.8 IS L M2, Sigma 120-300mm f2.8 OS, Canon MPE 65mm f2.8 macro, Sigma 150mm f2.8 macro, Tamron 24-70mm f2.4, Sigma 70mm f2.8 macro, Sigma 8-16mm f4.5-5.6, Raynox DCR 250, loads of teleconverters and a flashy thingy too
My flickr (external link)

  
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Geejay
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Mar 06, 2011 18:16 |  #12

You missed kudos..... ;) So much more impressive to have that red ring around your lenses...


You can't erase a dream, you can only wake me up.

  
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denoir
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Mar 06, 2011 18:40 |  #13

Primarily for the drawing style, of which the color rendering is a part of. There's more to it however - the micro/local contrast, the bokeh, the sharpness-to-blur transition etc

So my modified list in order of priority would be:

Drawing style (including color rendition)
Aperture
Sharpness
Build and weathersealing
Focus speed and accuracy (I buy mostly manual focus lenses these days)
Resale value


Luka C.D| My photos (external link) | My videos (external link) | My Cameras & Lenses

  
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AbPho
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Mar 06, 2011 18:47 as a reply to  @ denoir's post |  #14

I would pay the extra money for:
1) constant aperture
2) faster apertures
3) full time manual focus
4) free lens hood :lol:

Things to come free with those expensive lenses:
5) slightly better image quality
6) different colour rendition - usually for the better
7) red ring - equivalent to a guys engagement ring I suppose
8) pouch
9) extra weight. due to faster constant glass and metal bodies.

Things that do not affect me:
10) weather sealing - because my camera body does not offer it. Becomes redundant it only the lens has it.

Some lenses do not come cheaply. Like the tilt and shift lenses by Canon. Or the super telephoto primes.


I'm in Canada. Isn't that weird!

  
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bexi20
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Mar 06, 2011 18:47 as a reply to  @ denoir's post |  #15

I like to pick more then one option.


Canon 5D Mark II

  
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