Originally posted by: pontifex
Originally posted by: tfinch2
Originally posted by: pontifex
Originally posted by: tfinch2
Originally posted by: pontifex
The dark horse: This is a lens that belongs in every single Canon SLR owner?s backpack - bar none. At a mere $80 USD, the Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 II, a.k.a. the ?Plastic Fantastic?, offers an incredibly large aperture, stunningly sharp visuals and a fanastically low physical weight at the cost of a fixed focal length, plastic construction and a sometimes frustrating stepper-style autofocus motor. But for the price and versatility, you simply cannot go wrong.
anyone know an equivalent Nikon lens?
uhhh, the Nikon 50mm f/1.8
well obviously but i meant in quality and versatility and price...
Well now that you put it that way, I'd have to go with the...Nikon 50mm f/1.8
You've got to be kidding me. Are you dense?
fvck you. when you originally replied you made it sound like it would just be the nikon 1.8 because its the same specs as the canon. if thats still what you mean, you're just a retard.
yllus posted this:
Walkabout Lenses
So far we?ve looked at the ultra-wide (10mm - 20mm) and zoom (70mm - 200mm) lens ranges. How about that crucial in-between area for stuff that?s not too closeby and not too far away?
Good: Once again, we go first-party with the Canon EF 17-40mm f/4L USM lens. On a 1.6x field of view crop body like the Canon EOS 350D, Canon EOS 400D (Digital Rebel XT, Digital Rebel XTi) or Canon EOS 30D, that works out to a 27.2 - 64mm focal range; just what we?re looking for. Located squarely in the medium price range for quality lenses (especially considering its ?L? status), the 17-40mm will run you about $680 USD.
Almost as good, but cheaper: The Sigma 18-50mm f/2.8 EX DC actually takes an advantage on the score of maintaining a large aperture of f2.8 over its entire range of focal lengths, but takes a step back in its lack of high speed autofocusing mechanisms (especially when compared to Canon?s USM technology) and in that nearly unmeasurable ?sharpness? attribute. However, at $360 USD, how can you complain?
The dark horse: This is a lens that belongs in every single Canon SLR owner?s backpack - bar none. At a mere $80 USD, the Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 II, a.k.a. the ?Plastic Fantastic?, offers an incredibly large aperture, stunningly sharp visuals and a fanastically low physical weight at the cost of a fixed focal length, plastic construction and a sometimes frustrating stepper-style autofocus motor. But for the price and versatility, you simply cannot go wrong.
he made it sound like the 1st 2 lenses were the ones to get but the cheap 50mm was super great compared to the others. i'm just asking if Nikon had something similar. so get off your fvcking elitist, know-it-all, high horse.