Show girls .
85mm is my main lens of choice, which is amusing because it's a portrait lens as you know and you don't want to shoot portraits. That said, I use it as my main street art lens, and I am sure you can find a lot of weird shit in Vegas to shoot that way. Obviously you need something wider for murals, but there is all kinds of cool wheat paste or sticker art, posters etc.
I hesitate to recommend you go check out the abandoned neon sign collection (which is actually pretty badass and one of the only good things to do if you're in that fucking cesspool nightmare of a city), but you really don't have anything wide enough to capture a lot of it. Maybe you can eek by with the 50mm.
I was going to suggest the same thing but it's a minimum of $22 to get in with photography tours at $50.I hesitate to recommend you go check out the abandoned neon sign collection (which is actually pretty badass and one of the only good things to do if you're in that fucking cesspool nightmare of a city), but you really don't have anything wide enough to capture a lot of it. Maybe you can eek by with the 50mm.
I was going to suggest the same thing but it's a minimum of $22 to get in with photography tours at $50.
Never been to Vegas but the strip at night should be amazing. The fountains at the Billagio and Fremont Street Experience "Glitter Glitch" would be cool.
Maybe you can rent a wide angle lens if you need one.
Yeah, I'd go downtown to Fremont Street and take some pictures of the showgirls!
Maybe you can rent a wide angle lens if you need one.
To what end? Without a model release, I can't do much with the pictures.
No portraits.
Are you shooting for fun or to sell? You don't need to spend that much for a decent f2.8 wide zoom. Street photography is more fun than just shooting the outside of building (which nobody will buy, anyway) and you don't need a release if you only intend personal and/or editorial usage, so long as you are in a public place.To what end? Without a model release, I can't do much with the pictures.
Who said you had to include their faces?
Are you shooting for fun or to sell? You don't need to spend that much for a decent f2.8 wide zoom. Street photography is more fun than just shooting the outside of building (which nobody will buy, anyway) and you don't need a release if you only intend personal and/or editorial usage, so long as you are in a public place.
I'm not familiar with that particular lens. All I've ever shot was Canon and Nikon equipment, starting back in the prehistoric film days. But, if all you've got as a professional photographer is a bag full of telephotos then you are severely limited in what you can shoot and the money you can make. In the moderately wide range, my cheapo Tamron 17-50/2.8 is plenty sharp enough to produce images for any client I sell to these days, being that I'm semi-retired and living out in the sticks.I'm a perfectionist. For example, I'm not even satisfied with a Zeiss 15mm Distagon due to its soft corners.
85mm is my main lens of choice, which is amusing because it's a portrait lens as you know and you don't want to shoot portraits. That said, I use it as my main street art lens, and I am sure you can find a lot of weird shit in Vegas to shoot that way. Obviously you need something wider for murals, but there is all kinds of cool wheat paste or sticker art, posters etc.
I hesitate to recommend you go check out the abandoned neon sign collection (which is actually pretty badass and one of the only good things to do if you're in that fucking cesspool nightmare of a city), but you really don't have anything wide enough to capture a lot of it. Maybe you can eek by with the 50mm.
Do some long exposures like:
Cactus garden could have some decent shots? Drive out to Valley of a Fire maybe. Exotic cars in rough shape at one of the tracks?Take the Ethel M Chocolates tour. It might be fun to take pictures of the production line.
you use that on a crop body or on 35 mm?