Remember those new primes with IS on them supposedly coming out? (see http://www.canonrumors.com/2012/02/pricing-of-the-new-lenses/) Any word on how they are coming along, or more reviews/thoughts on them?
Drizzt321 said:Remember those new primes with IS on them supposedly coming out? (see http://www.canonrumors.com/2012/02/pricing-of-the-new-lenses/) Any word on how they are coming along, or more reviews/thoughts on them?
wickidwombat said:more to the point any news on finding people that are actually going to buy them?
JR said:wickidwombat said:more to the point any news on finding people that are actually going to buy them?
I may be tempted to get on of them for video...not sure yet. WOuld have to try it and see some reviews, but I do a lot of family video with my 24mm. I like primes but if it was IS on top of it, I would look into it. Though I have other lenses on my hit list first, like the new 24-70 II.
wickidwombat said:JR said:wickidwombat said:more to the point any news on finding people that are actually going to buy them?
I may be tempted to get on of them for video...not sure yet. WOuld have to try it and see some reviews, but I do a lot of family video with my 24mm. I like primes but if it was IS on top of it, I would look into it. Though I have other lenses on my hit list first, like the new 24-70 II.
this is my point, its a LOT of money for a slow prime with IS which goes a large way to paying for a good chunk of the upcoming 24-70 which from the charts looks to be a screamer. I guess it depends on how important the IS is. Even if they had made these primes f2 they would have had a whole lot more appeal but 2.8? hardley gets the blood pumping
pharp said:Has to be aimed at the video crowd - can't imagine these being of any interest to still shooters, especially at that price point.
Looks like Nikon is going down the same road - slow wide angle prime with image stabilization;
http://nikonrumors.com/2012/01/15/nikon-files-patent-for-a-35mm-f2-8-vr-full-frame-lens.aspx/
TrumpetPower! said:Those lenses will have to have out-of-this-world image quality if they're going to sell more than a small handful of them. And if the not-quite-yet-on-the-street Tamron 24-70 f/2.8 with image stabilization is at all decent, basically nobody will buy Canon's new primes.
While I agree that f/2.8 is plenty for DOF, the 70-200 has a huge advantage over either of these primes, since the focal length also effects DOF. I've found I can isolate a subject more at 200mm f/4 than I can at, say, 50mm f/2.8.birdman said:F/2.8 is plenty for DOF effects...have you ever heard anyone with a 70-200 2.8 complain of lacking DOF?
preppyak said:While I agree that f/2.8 is plenty for DOF, the 70-200 has a huge advantage over either of these primes, since the focal length also effects DOF. I've found I can isolate a subject more at 200mm f/4 than I can at, say, 50mm f/2.8.birdman said:F/2.8 is plenty for DOF effects...have you ever heard anyone with a 70-200 2.8 complain of lacking DOF?
But, at 24mm and 28mm, its more about getting the low-light shot than worrying about DOF; especially on a full-frame setup.
I hate to be that annoying guy, but technically focal length does not affect depth of field. However, due to compression distortion, the out of focus background is essentially enlarged, which magnifies the blur and makes DoF appear narrower.preppyak said:While I agree that f/2.8 is plenty for DOF, the 70-200 has a huge advantage over either of these primes, since the focal length also effects DOF
I'm not too interested in the 24 or 28mm lenses but if they come out with a 35mm f/2 IS, I would jump all over it even at the $8-900 price it seems like it would have. It would be a no-brainer instant pre-order for me.wickidwombat said:more to the point any news on finding people that are actually going to buy them?
moreorless said:My guess is that these lenses will also look to target the landscape market, going from the MTF's they do seem to offer much better boarder to boarder sharpness than there predecessors or indeed the 24-105/24-70 mk1.