I guess the most relevant comparison for me would be, how do the inexpensive Canon primes such as the 28mm 1.8, 35mm f/2, and the 50mm 1.8 do at f/2.8 compared to say the 17-55 f/2.8 wide open at each comparable focal length?
TheDarkKnight Goldmember 1,194 posts Likes: 49 Joined Apr 2012 More info | Oct 04, 2012 19:03 | #1 I guess the most relevant comparison for me would be, how do the inexpensive Canon primes such as the 28mm 1.8, 35mm f/2, and the 50mm 1.8 do at f/2.8 compared to say the 17-55 f/2.8 wide open at each comparable focal length?
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pdrober2 Goldmember 2,318 posts Joined Nov 2010 Location: Durham, NC More info | Oct 04, 2012 19:14 | #2 my 17-55 was pretty sharp wide open, my my 50 1.8 was razor sharp at the same aperture. Fujifilm X-T1 | 23 | 27 | 56 | 90 | 55-200
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stumbows Senior Member 376 posts Joined Apr 2012 Location: Wollongong NSW Australia More info | Oct 04, 2012 19:18 | #3 Yea my nifty still blows me away with the sharpness it can produce up against my $3000 70-200 f/2.8, and it certainly does not get neglected against my other L's either. I am considering buying an 85 f/1.8 just because of how good the nifty is.
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JeffreyG "my bits and pieces are all hard" More info | Oct 04, 2012 19:33 | #4 It depends..... My personal stuff:http://www.flickr.com/photos/jngirbach/sets/
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Oct 04, 2012 20:13 | #5 at comparable apertures the sharpness of the 50/1.8 is better than the 50L. but the less than desirable bokeh, slow AF, build quality, etc, hurts it, but sharpness and image degradation on a FF at the edges, the 50/1.8 owns it. Canon 5d mkii | Canon 17-40/4L | Tamron 24-70/2.8 | Canon 85/1.8 | Canon 135/2L
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kf095 Out buying Wheaties More info | They are all reasonably sharp, zooms and primes. M-E and ME blog
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RobDickinson Goldmember More info | Oct 04, 2012 21:25 | #7 50/1.8 is one of canons sharpest lenses and usually as sharp for the same aperture as the other 50 primes. www.HeroWorkshops.com
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FuturamaJSP Goldmember 2,227 posts Likes: 82 Joined Oct 2009 More info | Oct 05, 2012 14:21 | #8 I assume you are talking about center sharpness because if you look at the rest of the image the cheap primes don't perform very well compared to the high quality zooms They asked me how well I understood theoretical physics. I said I had a theoretical degree in physics. They said welcome aboard! - Fallout New Vegas
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RHChan84 Goldmember 2,320 posts Likes: 24 Joined Apr 2011 Location: Mass More info | Oct 05, 2012 14:53 | #9 Comparing my 17-50 f2.8 and 50mm f1.8, the 50mm1.8 is a tad bit sharper @f2.8 then the 17-50 but you would have to zoom in a lot on the photo to see it. Canon (60D Gripped | 18-135mm f3.5-5.6 IS | 40mm f2.8 | 50mm f1.8 | 70-200 F4L IS| 430 EXII)
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melauer Member 207 posts Likes: 2 Joined Dec 2010 More info | Oct 05, 2012 14:55 | #10 JeffreyG wrote in post #15080959 Even the slower 24-105 beats the pants off the non-ring-USM primes for AF. Just a note of caution here. Some cameras have autofocus (AF) points which work better with faster (larger aperture) lenses. f/2.8 is one of the cutoffs. So those primes have some AF advantages as well, e.g. when focusing in low light. Exactly which body/lens combination will focus faster and more accurately may depend on a particular combination of camera body, lens, lighting, and subject.
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ElDuderino Goldmember 1,921 posts Likes: 8 Joined Mar 2007 Location: Denver, CO More info | Oct 05, 2012 14:56 | #11 I primarily shoot landscape and most decent lenses are sharp at f/8-f/11. Doubt I could tell a difference between a prime and a zoom at those apertures. Nikon D600 | Bower 14mm f/2.8 | Nikon 16-35mm f/4 VR | Nikon 24-85mm f/3.5-4.5 VR | Nikon 50mm f/1.8G | Nikon 70-300mm f/4.5-5.6 VR
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JeffreyG "my bits and pieces are all hard" More info | Oct 05, 2012 15:51 | #12 melauer wrote in post #15084257 Just a note of caution here. Some cameras have autofocus (AF) points which work better with faster (larger aperture) lenses. f/2.8 is one of the cutoffs. You bring up good points, but at least to me what you wrote could be slightly misunderstood. The cutoff being f/2.8 actually means that no fast primes have an advantage in focusing over a zoom that is f/2.8 over the range. The cutoff is for lenses slower than f/2.8. My personal stuff:http://www.flickr.com/photos/jngirbach/sets/
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mfunnell Senior Member 375 posts Likes: 11 Joined Jul 2005 Location: Sydney, Australia More info | Oct 05, 2012 17:15 | #13 If we're just talking about sharpness then the nifty fifty is sharper than the 17-55/2.8, but the others, well, it's a little more even (of the ones I have: 24/2.8, 35/2 and 50/1.8). All have harsher bokeh than the 17-55, and to my eye the 17-55 renders colour rather more nicely. AF is much faster and more accurate with the 17-55, and it's USM focus works better with ETTL-II flash. The primes work on my 5Dc, the EF-S zoom doesn't. The primes are smaller and lighter to pack and carry, and are less obvious and "intimidating" when you point them at people. Some digital cameras, some film cameras, some lenses & other kit.
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