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Thread started 01 Dec 2004 (Wednesday) 13:43
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28-135 or 24-70l advice

 
loebas
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Dec 01, 2004 13:43 |  #1

18-55 is my current lens I take foto's with on my D300.
The quality of the pictures is ok, but personally I think they are not that great. I like sharp and clear pictures, and I don'want much PS work.

Have been reading a lot about lenses, and as a beginner I never thought there was so much to do about lenses.

Looking for a lens which I can use as a "walk around lens"

I wonder if I should by a 28-135 IS or a 24-70L.
Requieres a 24-70L lens more stability when taking photo's in comparison with an IS lens ?

As I life in a very nice area with lot of nature and wildlife I also think about a 70-200 2.8L IS lens.

Can someone help me in taking a good decision




  
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FlyingPete
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Dec 01, 2004 14:08 |  #2

A lot of the guys here aspire to the 24-70L, I know it is on my wish list (but not as a wlak about lens, too heavy and not flexible enough, and I need a small mortgage to get a CPL filter for it!)

My main walk around lens in my 28-105, which I find a nicer to use lens thatn the 18-55, although not as wide. Not sure of the value of IS on a lens at that focal length.

Have you looked at the 17-85IS as a potential option?


Peter Lowden.
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su719
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Dec 01, 2004 14:36 |  #3

The 24-70L is far superior, but it costs far more $$$$$. What is your use? For a hobbyist it may be overkill., but for the proffesional a must have. Have you considered the Tamron 28-75?


Canon 350D | Canon 50mm f1.8 MKII | Canon 420 EX |
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loebas
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Dec 01, 2004 14:51 |  #4

Re 28-135 versus 24-70l

Have my D300 for a year now and fell in love with photography.

Manage to take nice pictures.
I know that the ablility to compose a photo is more important then the lens, but if both are good you must be able to make photo's that are really "alive".

That's why I tought about the 27-40L. A lot of people on forums say that it is a super lens, in comparison to what they had before (28-135)

Why is the 28-135 lens not an option for me ?
17-85 IS is also an option, but the critics on this lens make me doubt wether it is a good option for me.




  
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tofuboy
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Dec 01, 2004 15:04 |  #5

It's no question the 24-70 is superior. The 28-135 is a good general use lens. It doesn't do anything spectacular, but it isn't bad either. What are your focal length requirements? Perhaps the 17-40 f/4.0L would suit you well. If money isn't an issue, then by I would definately take the 24-70 f/2.8L over the 28-135 (or the 16-35 f/2.8L over the 17-40 f/4.0L).


-Matt Seattle Photography - Nature|Portrait|Event (external link)
'The negative is comparable to the composer’s score and the print to its performance.' - Ansel Adams

  
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tim
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Dec 01, 2004 15:07 |  #6

I use the Tamron 28-75 as my walk around lens. Sometimes I need a wider shot, sometimes I need a longer zoom, but for the most part it's fine. The quality's good especially stopped down a bit.


Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
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loebas
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Dec 01, 2004 15:26 |  #7

re 28-135 and 24-70l

I take photo's of my children and love to take streetscenes/marketpla​ces etc , also very font of taking pictures in nature. Hate to use flash.

So do you advice 28-135/17-40l/24-70l.
Ore is the Tamron the option ?




  
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cdhender
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Dec 01, 2004 15:40 |  #8

I'd give serious consideration to the Tamron. Everything I"ve read says the Tamron can give you the L quality for a non-L price (around $300).

Do a search on Tamron and you'll find TONS of posts.


Chris

  
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tofuboy
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Dec 01, 2004 15:42 |  #9

loebas wrote:
I take photo's of my children and love to take streetscenes/marketpla​ces etc , also very font of taking pictures in nature. Hate to use flash.

So do you advice 28-135/17-40l/24-70l.
Ore is the Tamron the option ?

If you have the money and you won't miss the extra $$ it costs for the Canon, then I say go with the Canon.

24-70, 28-75, 28-135= good general use range. Might want wider for streetscenes/landscape​s, but should be just about right for portraits.

16-35/17-40 = good for streetscenes/landscape​s, but you might find yourself wanting something longer for portraits

f/2.8 (24-70, 28-75, 16-35) = better for lower light situations than the higher f numbered lenses.

Lots of Money: 24-70, 16-35
Less Money: 28-135, 17-40, 28-75

Factor in the cost and decide what features matter the most to you.


-Matt Seattle Photography - Nature|Portrait|Event (external link)
'The negative is comparable to the composer’s score and the print to its performance.' - Ansel Adams

  
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loebas
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Dec 01, 2004 16:28 |  #10

Tamron 28-75

Did some search for this lens on the net.
General conclusion it's a good lens.
It there anyone with a D300 who works with the Tamron, can you enclose some photos made with 300D and Tamron 28-75.

What do you think of the combination
18-55
28-75
70-200




  
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tim
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Dec 01, 2004 17:07 |  #11

loebas wrote:
Did some search for this lens on the net.
General conclusion it's a good lens.
It there anyone with a D300 who works with the Tamron, can you enclose some photos made with 300D and Tamron 28-75.

What do you think of the combination
18-55
28-75
70-200

Take a look at these, all taken with the Tamron on my 300D. There's >100 photos there, the first link is probably the best one.

http://mrwild.co.nz/So​lNetNZQACruise (external link)
http://mrwild.co.nz …Class_16-11-04/index.html (external link)
http://mrwild.co.nz …llery/Auckland/​index.html (external link)
http://mrwild.co.nz …Class_30-11-04/index.html (external link)

Some in the last one are blurry, that's my fault not the lens or the camera.


Professional wedding photographer, solution architect and general technical guy with multiple Amazon Web Services certifications.
Read all my FAQs (wedding, printing, lighting, books, etc)

  
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28-135 or 24-70l advice
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