I guess I will camp my 1st post over here this thread, since I planning to get 450D very soon, maybe before CNY.
Shifu, guide me if possible, because I will be asking lots of noob questions. Beginner going into dSLR world:bsmilie:
My 1st question, any good deal recently for 450D with kit lens 18-55m?
After 450D, my next purchase would be
1) EF 50 f/1.8 II
2) EF S18-200 f3.5-5.6IS
Do comment, not sure it is right choice a not:dunno:
Hi Joshua,
I would say, if you were to get the 18-200mm lens, it'll be a real waste. Because it's heavy. I don't think you want your DSLR to produce sub-par images that a normal Digicam can do. The 18-200mm lens is good for its long range, but picture quality and IQ are affected as the range gets longer, and the amount of glass elements needed to achieve this range. It's something called refraction, as the light goes a long distance through different glass elements, some of the light is lost through refraction. So that's why this lens doesn't give much of a very good picture. But it is certainly useful for traveling, as you don't have to keep changing lens. Then again, you have to think of this, DSLR photography is all about changing lens. If you want to just use one lens during traveling, you don't get that "joy" of swapping lens and having that personal feeling that you own a few lens and you know how to use them accordingly to different situations.
So if i were you. Get the 450D + Kit lens first. The Kit lens is a great lens. Don't look down on it. It can produce very good pictures as well.
Then if you are ready for the next step, get something else that you need. Maybe these 2 lenses can suit your needs. The 50mm f1.8 and the 55-250mm telephoto lens.
These are 2 great lenses with good picture outputs for a great price. You certainly will like these 2 lenses.
After these, maybe in a few years or months, you can consider L grade lenses which are more expensive. L grade lenses use as few glass elements as possible and each glass element/batch, is made by just one person.
Then again, you can have the most expensive stuff, but it all boils down to the guy/girl behind the camera. How your brain views a picture and its composition. How to use the settings on a camera to produce very nice effects.
So look into your needs, rather than to buy something on impulse and let it sleep at home.
Hope it helps. All the best in photography.
GMAN