Hunting Washington Forum
Community => Photo & Video => Topic started by: tlbradford on February 24, 2009, 10:45:21 AM
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I am trying to round out my lens needs minus the dedicated wildlife lens at this point in time. I currently have a Sigma 50 f/1.4 and a 70-200mm f2.8 L IS with a 1.4 convertor on the way. I am really impressed by the images that the 135 produces, but it seems like the Sigma will handle my portraits/kids/indoor stuff, and the 200 will handle everything else for now. What are your opinions on the 135mm? It seems that it really works on a full sensor camera, but not as great on a 1.6 crop sensor? Is that last statement true?
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Yeah, 135mm is too long for indoors and portraits on anything but a full frame camera. Essentially it becomes a 200mm lens with the crop factor and that is too much for everyday situations. Back when I took tight headshots a 200mm lens is what I used on a full frame camera. Unless you have a need for this niche lens, I would forgo this purchase.
You don't have anything wide angle I noticed. I would go for the 17-55 f2.8 IS or the 17-40 f4 L. Some people don't think this lens is quite wide or long enough. If you need wider and a bit longer to bridge the gap to your 70-200, you could look at the combination of the 10-22 and either the 24-105 f4 L IS or the 24-70 f2.8 L. I have the 10-22 and it is a great lens with L quality glass. It's good for landscape images and specialty wide angle stuff.
I have thought about paring down my lens collection and going with the 17-55 f2.8 IS and the 70-200 f2.8 L IS. Two lenses is easier to carry than 3 or 4 is my thinking and I think I could live without the super wide angle. I have held off on selling the 10-22 though as the glass is so good. Truth be told I'll probably end up keeping the lens as I can't get myself to get rid of it.
I've focused a lot on zooms here. If you are a prime type of guy many people like the 24mm, 35mm, and 85mm L series lenses. It's more to carry and pay for but the quality is top notch.
Obviously, keep the sigma 50/1.4 as it will be your indoor low light lens.
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The 135 is a fantastic lens. Extremely fast focusing, very sharp, wonderful bokeh, and pretty compact. I've found it's my sharpest lens, tied with my 300 2.8. Compared head to head to my 70-200 2.8 at 135mm, it's no contest. Hands down the 135 beats it. I use it a lot for indoor sports in gyms where even at ISO 3200 or 6400 the 70-200 2.8 isn't fast enough. For me, I have found the 135 to be a great lens for portraits with a 1.6 crop cam. The two pictures below are with that set up.
http://www.rivercolor.com/images/futureoutdoorsman.jpg
http://www.rivercolor.com/images/alreadyoutdoorswoman.jpg
That being said, it's not as versatile as your zoom. Indoors sometimes it's a little "long". If you are happy with your zoom, I'm not sure you would really need this lens. I think you would be happy with the 17-55 2.8IS. The build quality isn't as good as "L" glass, but the image quality is! While I don't own it, I have used it and found it a great lens.
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Thanks for the replies. It sounds like a great lens, but unless I am going to get really serious about photography, it is more of a niche lens. I'll put it on my future wish list for now along with the 400 DO and Nifty 50. Very helpful info. I have an 18-55 f/3.5-5.6 kit lens, but I was hoping to sell it for a few bucks and upgrade to the smaller lenses you discussed. Thanks again.