Sporgon said:silvestography said:Beginners don't have that kind of money to spend on a 50 (especially one that isn't 1.4).
Who's to say only beginners use a 50mm prime ?
From my point of view there is naf all difference between f1.4 and 1.8 on a 50. I'd much rather have the slightly slower lens with a smaller objective lens and sharp fully open rather than a 1.4 that is really soft at that aperture.
If I'm out hiking in a beautiful landscape looking for pictures I don't want to be lumbered with carrying gear, and that includes a tripod, so IS on a standard or wide angle lens is very useful to me, and I'm sure to others.
50mm has traditionally been a lens that the manufacturer can offer obsolute top image quality with an affordable price tag. Not everybody wants to fork out for and lug around a lens such as the ( albeit fantastic ) 24-70 f2.8 II.
EverydayGetaway said:Sporgon said:silvestography said:Beginners don't have that kind of money to spend on a 50 (especially one that isn't 1.4).
Who's to say only beginners use a 50mm prime ?
From my point of view there is naf all difference between f1.4 and 1.8 on a 50. I'd much rather have the slightly slower lens with a smaller objective lens and sharp fully open rather than a 1.4 that is really soft at that aperture.
If I'm out hiking in a beautiful landscape looking for pictures I don't want to be lumbered with carrying gear, and that includes a tripod, so IS on a standard or wide angle lens is very useful to me, and I'm sure to others.
50mm has traditionally been a lens that the manufacturer can offer obsolute top image quality with an affordable price tag. Not everybody wants to fork out for and lug around a lens such as the ( albeit fantastic ) 24-70 f2.8 II.
This.
I find it funny how everyone gets in arms about it being 1.8 instead of 1.4. I have a 50mm 1.4 and I use it at f/2 most of the time. On FF I find that f/1.4 the DOF is often too narrow, if this 50mm f/1.8 is a good performer I know I'll be all over it![]()
Etienne said:EverydayGetaway said:Sporgon said:silvestography said:Beginners don't have that kind of money to spend on a 50 (especially one that isn't 1.4).
Who's to say only beginners use a 50mm prime ?
From my point of view there is naf all difference between f1.4 and 1.8 on a 50. I'd much rather have the slightly slower lens with a smaller objective lens and sharp fully open rather than a 1.4 that is really soft at that aperture.
If I'm out hiking in a beautiful landscape looking for pictures I don't want to be lumbered with carrying gear, and that includes a tripod, so IS on a standard or wide angle lens is very useful to me, and I'm sure to others.
50mm has traditionally been a lens that the manufacturer can offer obsolute top image quality with an affordable price tag. Not everybody wants to fork out for and lug around a lens such as the ( albeit fantastic ) 24-70 f2.8 II.
This.
I find it funny how everyone gets in arms about it being 1.8 instead of 1.4. I have a 50mm 1.4 and I use it at f/2 most of the time. On FF I find that f/1.4 the DOF is often too narrow, if this 50mm f/1.8 is a good performer I know I'll be all over it![]()
f/1.4 allows you to get shallow DOF at longer focal distances. Not all shallow DOF photography and videography is headshots, in which 1.4, or even 2.8, on FF can be too shallow.
EverydayGetaway said:I find it funny how everyone gets in arms about it being 1.8 instead of 1.4. I have a 50mm 1.4 and I use it at f/2 most of the time. On FF I find that f/1.4 the DOF is often too narrow, if this 50mm f/1.8 is a good performer I know I'll be all over it![]()
silvestography said:AndreeOnline said:ajfotofilmagem said:Even if the quality is equivalent the new 24/28/35mm a price 5 times higher than the current 50 F1.8 would scare potential buyers and push them to Sigma.
Regardless of price, an IS lens can't push someone to buy a non IS lens.
These lenses are specifically made with IS for hybrid shooters/videographers. Non IS lenses are not an alternative.
I actually disagree. I have a friend who's super into video (shoots with a hacked GH2) and doesn't care about in-lens stabilization. If you're really serious about video you'll have your own stabilization rigs, which is partly why he wants to add a 60d and 50 1.8 to his kit.
It's similar to the argument about the 70d's LV focus. A lot of people said serious video shooters wouldn't use it. I think the same applies here, which is why a stabilized 50 1.8 at around 5x the cost of the previous generation doesn't make sense. Beginners don't have that kind of money to spend on a 50 (especially one that isn't 1.4).
Sporgon said:Etienne said:EverydayGetaway said:Sporgon said:silvestography said:Beginners don't have that kind of money to spend on a 50 (especially one that isn't 1.4).
Who's to say only beginners use a 50mm prime ?
From my point of view there is naf all difference between f1.4 and 1.8 on a 50. I'd much rather have the slightly slower lens with a smaller objective lens and sharp fully open rather than a 1.4 that is really soft at that aperture.
If I'm out hiking in a beautiful landscape looking for pictures I don't want to be lumbered with carrying gear, and that includes a tripod, so IS on a standard or wide angle lens is very useful to me, and I'm sure to others.
50mm has traditionally been a lens that the manufacturer can offer obsolute top image quality with an affordable price tag. Not everybody wants to fork out for and lug around a lens such as the ( albeit fantastic ) 24-70 f2.8 II.
This.
I find it funny how everyone gets in arms about it being 1.8 instead of 1.4. I have a 50mm 1.4 and I use it at f/2 most of the time. On FF I find that f/1.4 the DOF is often too narrow, if this 50mm f/1.8 is a good performer I know I'll be all over it![]()
f/1.4 allows you to get shallow DOF at longer focal distances. Not all shallow DOF photography and videography is headshots, in which 1.4, or even 2.8, on FF can be too shallow.
You're right about the very fast apertures being more practical when the subject is further away. On a 50mm at about 12 feet you have about 16" of dof at f1.4 and about 20" at f1.8. For me it makes no difference especially if the 1.8 lens is very sharp at 1.8 so there is more sharp contrast between in and out of focus.
LetTheRightLensIn said:I wonder why they don't just give the 50 1.4 proper USM high-precision AF. They use an out and out faulty design on that, why do they never fix it? The mechanism was not designed with enough precision and, much worse, it has a design flaw that causes it to break in unreasonable fashion, they should've recalled the AF design.
Etienne said:f/1.4 allows you to get shallow DOF at longer focal distances. Not all shallow DOF photography and videography is headshots, in which 1.4, or even 2.8, on FF can be too shallow.
cellomaster27 said:Time to sell my 50 1.8 fast before this comes out... to the people not on canon rumors. XD
cellomaster27 said:Okay canon, give me this lens with good construction, metal mount, sharp at 1.8, and under 500 and I'm sold. hopefully that's not asking too much.Pretty excited about this rumor.
I really like lenses that can go wide.. but it seems that wide just is more of bragging rights than actual use. Sure there are AMAZING photos taken at f1.2, 1.4... but most are just fine/better at higher f stops. Just my opinion.
Time to sell my 50 1.8 fast before this comes out... to the people not on canon rumors. XD
Sella174 said:Make it an EF 50mm f/2.5 USM IS Compact-Macro with the same 1:2 magnification, and perhaps weather-sealing, then I'll be interested. Otherwise, what's the point of it either not being f/1.4 or super-cheap? It's one or the other.
Woody said:Now, between f/1.4 and f/2.5, the difference is 1.67 stop... that is significant. I will not get a 50 f/2.5 lens, useless to me.