It may feel cheap, but the results are very good, especially for the price. Ask yourself if you really need half a stop extra. I have a f/1.4 30mm and 50mm and I love those, but when shooting at f/1.4, I quickly ran into the limitations of my 450D (shooting in daylight at f/1.4 and 100ISO, and you're at the 1/4000th of a second limit really quick, and it's STILL overexposedYa I've thought about the 1.8 $100 lens but I don't know, it feels kind of cheap but then again it is cheap. I'd like to shoot with both of them and see how they are.
This is something I don't get, when a lens discussion is made people hardly ever focus on anything but Canon or Nikon, is it because they haven't heard of anyone but them or something else? I'm not saying Canon or Nikon glass is rubbish as they have an absolute fortune to put into development but they don't really have experience of someone like Carl Zeiss.
I absolutely love my 70-200 2.8 is L.
Every time i go to an event wether its a music or car or something else i always say to myself im going to use one of my other lenses but always use this.
Just something about the effect and colours that come through on the L that just seems to beat anything else i have which to be fair isnt much
Doesn't like tripods though and this was with my 450d! The tripod cant even cope with the gripped 7D and this lense
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This is something I don't get, when a lens discussion is made people hardly ever focus on anything but Canon or Nikon, is it because they haven't heard of anyone but them or something else? I'm not saying Canon or Nikon glass is rubbish as they have an absolute fortune to put into development but they don't really have experience of someone like Carl Zeiss.
Images from this Zeiss Distagon 35mm f/2 are mindbogglingly sharp.
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Only drawback is no autofocus which I personally wouldn't find a problem on something like a 35mm but on a longer prime I couldn't do without. Sigh, if only I had the money.
I think most people are likely to comment on ones that they have used or have experience of using in the past,not many people can afford zeiss lenses....well except maybe giles![]()
"The only drawback is no autofocus" is usually a game-ender for most people. I think people get into the "system" aspect of buying camera gear, progressing up through the body manufacturer's lens lineup. This seems to be particularly the case with Canon owners, where it's really rare to see a Canon owner not using Canon lenses.
I can see how people would find this a pain at longer focal lengths but I've never ever experienced the need for it on wide angle lenses, although that could be due to the fact that I rarely use autofocus unless I need it because it's so bad on my body.
I guess what annoys me the most is when people don't actually consider what they shoot and just buy a lens because "it's better". Seriously I've seen people ask my mate who uses an Olympus say "Why does your lens have a blue ring around it? Don't you know all the best lenses have red rings around them?", then proceed to point out their Sigma. Urgh!
I think there are plenty of people that think a better lens will make them a better photographer or their pictures will automatically be better (which they are of course notThis is something I don't get, when a lens discussion is made people hardly ever focus on anything but Canon or Nikon, is it because they haven't heard of anyone but them or something else?
In all fairness, if a lens gets mostly bad reviews from professionals and amateurs alike, I think it's safe to diss it without having tried it.I see people happy to diss a lens they've never really used.
I had a talk from Ed Swinden and he went through how he plans all his images. How he spent weeks waiting for the right weather and light conditions, then waiting some more to get the correct subject for his images.