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Thread started 05 Apr 2004 (Monday) 17:41
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real life reviews of the 28 - 135 IS

 
Celtic5549
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Apr 05, 2004 17:41 |  #1

this is another lens that i am considering and was recommended in one of my other posts...just how heavy does it feel and is the IS system the same as that in the 70 - 200 2.8?
i will be carrying this all over europe for two weeks so the wieght and bulk are important but not as important as sharpness...
thanks




  
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PacAce
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Apr 05, 2004 17:59 |  #2

The 28-135 IS is a very light-weight and relatively compact lens. It makes a good all-around lens.

As far as the IS goes, it only has one IS mode whereas the 70-200 f/2.8 has two. But it does do a good job with image stabilization.

I use the lens often and I'm very pleased with the images I get from it.


...Leo

  
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5 ­ Type
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Apr 05, 2004 18:00 |  #3

I do own one.

Since it's my only lens, I can't compare. But, I think it's pretty light, Give you a nice "all around" range. It's not that fast though (3.5-5.6).

As for sharpness, it's better than the kit lens that comes with the rebel, but it's not an L lens (neither does the weight or the price). Finaly, if you do mostly outdoor pictures, just stop it down a bit and you'll be in business.

my 2 cents




  
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yenoram
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Apr 05, 2004 18:57 |  #4

I've had a 28-135IS for three years the first two of which it spent most of its time mounted on my D60. I picked up a 28-70 2.8L a year or so ago and this lens bumped my 28-135IS. I pulled it out the other day and I couldn't believe how light it felt compared to the 28-70. The 28-135IS is a great all-purpose lens and I wouldn't hesitate to recommend it. My only concerns with this lens were as follows:

- barrel creep when the lens was pointing down;
- slow (that is once you get used to 2.8), and
- as odd as this may sound, it consistently underexposed on my D60 - a problem I have not had with my 28-70. Of course, EC solved the issue but I found this a pain. I've kept my 28-135IS in the expectation of replacing my D60 (which hopefully will happen soon!)




  
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IanD
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Apr 05, 2004 19:03 |  #5

The 28-135IS is my Walk Around lens. Very light and excellent images. Cannot go wrong with it for the price.


Ian (®Feathers & Fur)
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Gerdav43
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Apr 05, 2004 19:48 |  #6

I am new to DSLR or SLR photography just this past year. The reason I say this is because I don't have all the fancy L glass lenses that many of these gentlemen and women have (my perspective is from smaller to bigger). I came from a Kodak point and shoot digital and a Rebel SLR film camera that did not get much play time for cost reasons. After I bought my D60 I needed a better lense then the one that came with my rebel (35-80mm cheapie lense). I went with the 28-135 IS as a all around lense for day trips, family outings and vacations. From my perspective as an amateur this lense was a fairly significant upgrade in weight and size. It is heavy relative to the lense I have but it is certainly manageable to carry on a trip as you describe. I would give this a lense a thumbs up. I've had great success to this point.
One day I will graduate to these bigger L lenses and look back and think, wow that 28-135 was really small and lightweight. :)


Canon 60D
Canon 70-200 F4 L + Sigma 1.4 T-con
Canon 50mm 1.8
Canon Speedlite 580EX/Canon Speedlite 420EX

  
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Jesper
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Apr 06, 2004 00:52 |  #7

I also have an 28-135 IS USM and I like it a lot - the IS is wonderful. It's not the fastest lens (f/3.5-5.6) but the IS partly compensates for that - you can use much slower shutter times than without it and still get sharp photos.

It's not an "L" lens but it is Canon's best consumer-grade zoom lens.


Canon EOS 5D Mark III

  
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timmyquest
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Location: Outside of Chicago
     
Apr 06, 2004 00:56 |  #8
bannedPermanent ban

Can i request some pictures :-D


Capturing life a fraction of a second at a time

  
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toddb
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Apr 06, 2004 02:22 |  #9

That and the 50mm 1.8 is all I got, got about 10,000 shots and alot posted here:
http://www.toddburke.n​et/ (external link)


10D, EF17-40L, EF50F1.4, EF28-135IS, 550EX [AlienBees 2xB800 and 1xB400 with large softbox and reversible umbrella] Sekonic L-358

  
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Celtic5549
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Apr 06, 2004 09:14 |  #10

amazing that there was not one negative review...

i think that answered my question. thanks everyone.
J




  
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bugs
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Apr 06, 2004 10:18 |  #11

Hard to give this lense a bad review - it was my first lense, and its still the one I use 90% of the time.

Its simply a great all-round lense thats hard to beat when price is taken into acount.

Below picture was taken using this lense :D

IMAGE NOT FOUND
Byte size: ZERO | Content warning: NOT AN IMAGE



  
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5 ­ Type
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Apr 06, 2004 11:01 |  #12

Taken with this lens :

IMG NOTICE: [NOT AN IMAGE URL, NOT RENDERED INLINE]
If you want to see more : http://www.jsl.studios​j.com (external link)

With this picture you can appreciate :
- Color
- Sharpness

I know the picture is a bit small, but I don't have the original handy.

There was no post processing done on it.



  
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chris.bailey
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Location: Norwich, Norfolk, UK
     
Apr 07, 2004 05:50 |  #13

IMAGE: http://www.pbase.com/image/26551164.jpg

Taken with the 28-135 IS (off). Its the lense I keep on the 10D unless I make a decision to use something else. Get a hoody for it as flare can be a problem at wide angles.



  
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Guillermo ­ Freige
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Location: La Plata, Argentina
     
Apr 07, 2004 09:40 |  #14

Its a very good lens, and with a excellent value. I'm posting 2 links, to the same picture (almost) taken with the 18-55 at 55 and the 28-135IS at 50, at 1/800 f/8 ISO400, with minutes of difference. Sorry about the different framing. Despite that, you can see the HUGE difference between lenses. Straight from camera images.

http://gfreige.homelin​ux.org/18-55-55-f8.jpg (external link)

http://gfreige.homelin​ux.org/28-135-50-f8.jpg (external link)

And this is a similar picture taken prevously with the 50/1.8 at f/8. This one is in AdobeRGB colorpace and using a wider framing.

http://gfreige.homelin​ux.org/50-f8.jpg (external link)


Guillermo
EOS 5D MkII, 40D and 20D owner.
EF 17-40L, 24-105L IS , 70-300 IS, 24 f2.8, 35 f2, 50 f2.5 Macro, 85 f1.8.
EF-s 18-55 IS. Sigma 12-24, Tamron 17-50 Di II

  
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Belmondo
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Apr 07, 2004 10:02 |  #15

Guillermo:

I'm having trouble getting your links to work. I'd love to see those pictures.


I'm not short. I'm concentrated awesome!

  
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real life reviews of the 28 - 135 IS
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