bayusuputra
Senior Member
I have a feeling some of the basic knowledge of photography (f-stop, focal length, shutter speed, dof, ev, etc) are disappering in the modern age of digital photography.
It was a norm for starters to just get hold of a basic pentax k1000 manual body and a 50mm standard lens and start shooting everything in manual to understand the true meaning and effect of the basic parameters. Nowadays, automation and technologies have obviously taken over.
Do more hands on shoot to understand the essence of various parameters, one's own style of shoot, and in turn the required gear. Need not be chasing equipment and numbers all the time just to feel comfortable.
Hehe, not true for me.. i use my d70 in M modes all the time cus i only have manual lenses.. no metering at all.. i treat it like my old slr, but with image review..;p
coming back to the topic.. i think TS should consider his budget and try out 3rd party as well.. and consider whether it's gonna be hand-held or on tripod.. if hand-held, constant big aperture will help to a certain extent.. eg even if u stop down a bit to up the sharpness in the tokina 11-16mm, the f-value will be similar as the non-constant 10-24 nikon (but obviously the nikon will be at wide open, assuming u stop down to f/3.5).. but if you mainly use a tripod or flash (night portrait?), maybe u can get non-constant ones (cheaper generally) and stop down further to increase sharpness.. for fixed aperture lens, they are usually expensive, and personally i can't see the use of constant aperture YET especially the slower one like f/4 (but it is diff case with the tokina, cus i can see the use in dim lighting), this is because i shoot landscape with tripod (i will stop down to abt f/11 or f/13 for DOF and sharpness, i use 28mm though, i feel that it is my normal lens and i like it, so i take landscape using it too, can right? hehe)..
please correct the above if any of u think it is wrong or anything..
i am still climbing the early part of my learning curve as well..:sweat:
but, as u intend to use it for portraits, i think the tokina will be a good choice (well, i use my assumption above and also assume u would use it handheld in daylight) as it can cover the wide, and near ur 18mm lens reach (the 2mm u can cover by moving a few feet)..
or maybe sigma 8-16mm:think: hehe..
Last edited: