ahsanford said:
IglooEater said:
Just my 2c: I know maybe a dozen or more enthusiast/advanced amateurs who do landscape and all but one use crop.
Entirely fair. Especially if long hikes are involved, I'd be doing the same.
I made the plunge to FF in 2012 and did not regret it. I made the move for a boatload of reasons, but in the landscaping front, I felt the FF UWA lenses were simply higher class than the crop ones. (As much as there are
sharp UWA lenses for crop out there aplenty, not all of them are particularly well built and only a few are sealed).
But everyone invests their photography dollars differently. Some landscapers might value amassing a wide portfolio of glass, timelapse hardware, filtering options, etc. than pony up for a FF rig.
- A
I find it interesting how various people speculate about FF (35mm) vs APS-C (crop).
My favourite genre of photography is landscape, and I use 2 x APS-C cameras – the 7D and 350D. But I also do a whole lot of other types of photography – wildlife, macro – as well as ‘events’ (e.g. camps, the occasional party, street, etc). I do not …yet… own FF, and who knows, maybe I never will.
The 80D’s improved DR at low ISOs, better noise control, etc compared to most (if not all) other current Canon APS-C sensors is very welcome. Though to be honest, I know the most appreciated photos are not ones that people pixel peep over.
I previously owned the Sigma 10-20mm f/4-5.6 UWA, which was very well built and wonderful IQ… pretty sharp corner to corner. (It had some AF inconsistencies, but for UWA it didn’t matter, I effectively used it as manual focus / MF). I considered the Canon 10-22mm, and a few other lenses back then. A few years back I upgraded to the Sigma 8-16mm which improved on the Sigma 10-20mm in every way.
My analysis of many FF UWA zooms (and even many primes) has me really appreciating how sharp many APS-C lenses are in the corners in comparison. Many UWA zooms these days present great choices for APS-C owners. While not all are weather sealed, I would state many are decent enough in quality – that the discerning multi-purpose photographer finds APS-C matched with UWAs really a good balance for landscape.
I provide informal photography training, including organising outings for people to get together, learn and practice. Of all these events I have organised over the years, only 2 people have had FFs. (1 x Nikon D800 and 1x Canon 1DsmkIII). A breakdown of the other types of camera would be something like this: Canon DSLRs (35%), Nikon DSLRs (35%) and a remaining 25% Point & Shoot / bridge cameras… a variety of brands. Have only had 1 Sony mirrorless.
I agree with what Dilbert wrote above. Many people do not buy/use one camera for purpose X, and then have/use another camera for purpose Y. APS-C bodies … and particularly lenses, are much more affordable to reach ‘the very high quality’ level. Plus, getting that extra reach is very welcome (e.g. on Saturday I was getting ‘closer’ images at a zoo with my 70-300mm on my 7D, than the 8 people who had FF cameras and 100-400mm / Nikon 200-400mm cameras).
Nothing against, FF… maybe one day I will own a FF DSLR (or mirrorless)- but at this stage, my APS-C camera really suits me well. I look forward to seeing how the 80D early adopters find it, and will definitely read many reviews… consider if I might buy it…. Well done Canon.
(And thanks all for reading my long post!)
Regards…
Paul 8)