ddrueding
Fixture
A friend is going to let me borrow an 85/1.2LII for a couple weeks. Looking forward to playing with it. Any strengths/weaknesses I should be wary of?
You don't get it. 85mm is 85mm. The crop discards 62% of the area but does not change the focal length.
I just saw the 6D this morning. 4.5FPS? WTF? If it could keep up with the 7D I would be all over it.
The 6D is a turd for the price. I hope Canon sells only a handful of them, has to drop their shorts on the price, and learns a lesson.
But, realistically speaking I don't see Canon learning a lesson even if they have to drop their shorts on the price due to poor sales.
Well, at $1500 the 6D is a great camera. At $2100 Canon is out of their mind.Unfortunately they will probably come down in price a but and sell quite well.
Actually, I have the 17-40/4L (no IS). I also have the 10-22, 40/2.8 and the 50/1.4 in that range. The 85/1.2LII is certainly on it's way out, and the next lens up is the 100/2 then the 180 Macro before the Sigma 175-500 crap lens. I think even without anything between the 50 and the 100 I should be fine for now.
Anyone want to buy a Canon EF 24-105mm f/4 L IS USM Lens?
Get a 35/1.4.
It looks like a nice lens. What would you say is the primary usage of the 35/1.4? My first thought was studio/portrait work. Would you say this lens is preferred over and above the 85/1.2 L or the 50/1.2 L?
The 85/1.2 was great for studio work, the images were great. The downsides were that it weighed a ton and the autofocus was off by 5-10x the DoF @ 1.2 when it did eventually settle on what it thought was focus.
If I was doing studio work and had a larger external monitor to use liveview and focus manually it would be one of my favorites.
Normally it is for general reportage in low light, or environmental portratits. You are more likely to see a 24-70 of some sort in the studio (for those shooting 135 format) for the normal angles and a 70-200/2.8 as short tele, along with some good fast primes like an 85/1.4 and 135/2. Of course that is a cliche and many pro photographers have bags full of various lenses for specific purposes.
The damned APS-C (DX, EF-S, etc.) format complicates the situation by severely cropping the lenses and requiring shorter lenses that are not proportionally faster.
Start reading.... I want a proper lens to use that has proper sharpness, contrast, and IQ in a lit environment.
What type of studio is this, portrait, products, food, other? Who are the clients, what are they looking for, will there be reps on site, etc. The output expectations often drive the IQ requirements. Amateurs typically go overboard on lenses, but skip on cameras, lighting, backdrops, tethering and other setups that make a business run smoothly and efficiently.
Have you looked at AlienBees?I'm working on the lighting and we have a backdrop setup already in place. I'm still using my two Canon cameras (1D MKIII, and 5D MKII).
Did I suggest he get a 24-105L for his application? No, I just asked if he had one.He has the 24-70/2.8. Why go backwards to the 24-105? If anything, perhaps get the new 24-70. For the studio, money would be better spent on a prime, such as a 35, 50, 85, macro or TSE.
Did I suggest he get a 24-105L for his application? No, I just asked if he had one.