Given all of the love and hate that's arisen on CR from the Sigma 50A's debut, I thought I'd set up a silly poll... Yes, I'm guilty of 50L love, but have no ill feelings towards the Sigma.
I think that's a very fair way to look at it, and I'm sure it will be a nice upgrade for you.Jim Saunders said:It appears the new Sigma has better IQ for less money than the 50L, so it seems the obvious choice to replace the current Sigma 50 f/1.4 I have now. Half a stop is something I'd trade off here just fine. My 0.02.
Jim
Ruined said:This lens has a very special output that is extremely flattering for taking pictures of people
drjlo said:Ruined said:This lens has a very special output that is extremely flattering for taking pictures of people
Exactly. I use my 50L and 85L for people shots mainly, and the corner softness if anything adds to creating a unique look to portraiture. If I am going to do stopped-down landscape or architectural shoot, I break out my 24-70 II or T-SE 24 mm II.
Nailing focus at f/1.2 is not going to happen for everybody, but I highly recommend installing ML and use focus peaking in live view 8)
jdramirez said:I'm starting to ramble... I need one of yall to loan me your 50L for a week and I'll see if my opinion changes.![]()
I think the problem isn't reading those test results, it's reading too much into them. MTF50 in the center and averaged across the frame. Two numbers.jdramirez said:I think the problem is that I read this article...
http://www.lensrentals.com/blog/2012/01/the-great-50mm-shootout
And the 50 usm beat or matched the 50 L in sharpness.
Ruined said:jdramirez said:I'm starting to ramble... I need one of yall to loan me your 50L for a week and I'll see if my opinion changes.![]()
If you live in the NY/NJ USA area we could do a CR gear meet in Central Park and take some test shots, heh.
For those who have used the 85L II, if you think the 85L II is amazing it is hard to imagine how you would not love the 50L output just as much once you learn how to tame it.
privatebydesign said:The 300 f2.8 absolutely blows both the 1.2 50 and 85 L's away when it comes to bokeh orientated portrait imagery.
Ruined said:privatebydesign said:The 300 f2.8 absolutely blows both the 1.2 50 and 85 L's away when it comes to bokeh orientated portrait imagery.
But, the distance required for 300mm kills a large amount of portrait situations.
privatebydesign said:Ruined said:privatebydesign said:The 300 f2.8 absolutely blows both the 1.2 50 and 85 L's away when it comes to bokeh orientated portrait imagery.
But, the distance required for 300mm kills a large amount of portrait situations.
True, nothing comes without effort.
But however difficult manipulating the situation is, if you want the results that 50 and 85 lenses are incapable of delivering, whatever their speed, then do what it takes. If super bokeh and shallow dof are the primary characteristics wanted of a session then you have to go where you can use a vastly superior lens.
sagittariansrock said:I did notice, by the way that around 85mm (on a FF, not talking of equivalent FoV here) gives a nice balance of providing a 3D perspective and reducing distortion and separating the background. I love my new 135L, but I like portraits at 80-90mm with my 70-200 II better. I believe 300mm will make the subject look even flatter, won't it?
privatebydesign said:Ruined said:privatebydesign said:The 300 f2.8 absolutely blows both the 1.2 50 and 85 L's away when it comes to bokeh orientated portrait imagery.
But, the distance required for 300mm kills a large amount of portrait situations.
True, nothing comes without effort.
But however difficult manipulating the situation is, if you want the results that 50 and 85 lenses are incapable of delivering, whatever their speed, then do what it takes. If super bokeh and shallow dof are the primary characteristics wanted of a session then you have to go where you can use a vastly superior lens.
neuroanatomist said:privatebydesign said:Ruined said:privatebydesign said:The 300 f2.8 absolutely blows both the 1.2 50 and 85 L's away when it comes to bokeh orientated portrait imagery.
But, the distance required for 300mm kills a large amount of portrait situations.
True, nothing comes without effort.
But however difficult manipulating the situation is, if you want the results that 50 and 85 lenses are incapable of delivering, whatever their speed, then do what it takes. If super bokeh and shallow dof are the primary characteristics wanted of a session then you have to go where you can use a vastly superior lens.
"...super bokeh and shallow DoF..."
Let's consider the latter. If you frame the subject the same, e.g. a full-body portrait at 2 m with the 50/1.2 or 12 m with the 300/2.8, the subject magnification is the same. So, the f/1.2 aperture of the 50L will give a thinner DoF. If the subject-to-background distance is less than ~9 m, the 50L will deliver a stronger background blur.
Obviously, that's OOF blur amount, which is distinct from bokeh.