Khristo said:Yeti said:Mt Spokane Photography said:You will not have a need for f/2.8, so why carry that monster around?
Odd and definitive point of view, others have given good reason to go for the 2.8.
As for the latter half of your statement, "monster"? That lens is hardly a monster lens unless you're Monty Burns...![]()
I don't think it's too odd to say you won't need f/2.8 much. Zoo shots are going to be mostly about up close and recording detail and you could lose a lot of that with shallow DOF. OOF fur not too interesting!
Depends on the zoo of course, but my last zoo trip was about shooting over fences or through glass - not so much through fences. On that trip I used my 400 f/5.6 and the 70-200 f/2.8. Having checked those shots, there are a lot with the 400mm, but those with the 70-200 tended to be at 200mm and few at wide apertures.
Only exception was a close up (through glass) of one gorilla grooming another - that was at f/3.2 and did benefit from a portraity shallow DOF. But definitely the exception.
So, I think there's little to be lost with the f/4, and if it allows you to play with a 24mm f/1.4 as well - bonus!
You haven't been to our local Zoo then. All the big cats are behind chain link or thick glass which is usually dirty.
The problem is that the 200mm is almost to short for the ground layout. I have some great 300 mm f/2.8 baby tiger pics.
Some of me favorite pics are from the 24-70mm F/2.8 shot at or near wide open. They are orangutan and upland gorilla portraits.
If I am going to photograph the zoo I am taking the big guns, if I am taking the grandkids I am packing light.
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