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Old 22-03-12, 04:44 PM
ffc82 ffc82 is offline
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Lense Advise for New Baby

Hi just after some advice on a new lens. I have got a Canon 1000D and looking to get a new lens before the arrival of our first baby in August.

Im not completely fussed on the make but I have a contact with Canon that can give me good discount so ideally would go for a canon lens.

Any help would be great.
Thanks!
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Old 22-03-12, 07:13 PM
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Might help if you lets us know what you want the lens for?
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Old 23-03-12, 08:21 AM
wave01 wave01 is offline
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what do you have now
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Old 29-03-12, 03:14 PM
ffc82 ffc82 is offline
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Hi well just looking for a good lense to get some pictures of our baby when its born so probably something that can give me some good detail shots in most light conditions.

Currently I have just got the kit lense which off the top of my head is a 18-55 but its not a particular great lense to be honest thats why im looking to invest in something better.

Thanks
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Old 30-03-12, 07:16 AM
wave01 wave01 is offline
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I have a sigma 17-70os and for the price i find its a great all round lens. to be honest i would look at getting an external flash if you dont have one and used diffused bounced flash, the kit lens isnt that bad and the flash will help it
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Old 30-03-12, 07:07 PM
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Quote:
Originally Posted by ffc82 View Post
Currently I have just got the kit lense which off the top of my head is a 18-55 but its not a particular great lense to be honest thats why im looking to invest in something better.
Kit lenses are not bad at all. Obviously they're not professional caliber but I doubt you'd want to pay professional prices. Canon (and other makers) would not sell a kit lens that would make their cameras look bad.

It doesn't necessarily follow that the more expensive a camera and/or lens is, the better the photos it will take. Skill is very important, and that comes from practice. Some awful photos can come from an expensive lens in the hands of an unskilled photographer. You could spend a fortune on a lens and be very disappointed if your skills are not as sharp as the lens.

I would suggest practice with the lens that you have, but if you really want to get another lens, perhaps go with a prime lens, which is a fixed lens, not telephoto. A 35mm lens on a digital camera with a crop factor of 1.6, is roughly the equivalent of a "normal" 50 mm lens on a 35mm film camera. I just bought one for my Nikon D5100. It is a f/1:8 (maximum aperture) lens that sells for $199.95, and it does a superb job. Such lenses are sharp and have a great depth of field control when you need it.

Perhaps you could practice with your kit lens, using a doll or other object. Try bouncing your flash. If nothing else, a piece of white cloth or paper towel over the flash will give you a softer light. Composition is also very important, and post-processing can help to create a better finished product. Also, when the baby comes along, take lots of photos and only keep the ones you like.
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Old 04-04-12, 06:31 PM
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you won't go too far wrong with the canon 50mm F1.8 mk2 ( nifty fifty ) it's one of the few bargains of the lens world and can be had for less that £100

on your camera it will give an effective 80mm crop compared to full frame and is ideal for portraiture and natural light on a cropped sensor
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Old 22-06-12, 05:46 PM
Gaz2374 Gaz2374 is offline
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Originally Posted by cosmicma View Post
you won't go too far wrong with the canon 50mm F1.8 mk2 ( nifty fifty ) it's one of the few bargains of the lens world and can be had for less that £100

on your camera it will give an effective 80mm crop compared to full frame and is ideal for portraiture and natural light on a cropped sensor

I second this I bought the nifty fifty and it's spot on for portraits of my kids as it throws the background out really well and at less than £100 I think most canon users either keep one or have had one
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Old 22-06-12, 07:04 PM
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I would never give a new baby lens, they will get finger prints all over it
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