The point I was trying to make is that the people who have the 50mm f/1.2 do not see the Sigma or the Otus so much better that they would need to change. Also, the two third-party lenses are obviously not aimed at the same buyers as the Canon L. Now, if the owners of the Canon lens would be unhappy because their lense is not sharpe enough, that it is not fulfilling their demands, there would be a big supply of these lenses on the market pushing the prices down. Obviously, this is not the case.
Privatebydesign has a valuable point there. People paid a lot for something and they'd rather stick with their product than let go of it at a price that might actually close the deal. This might very well be the case. People buy shares and stick to them way past the point where they should have been sold. And those are the ones who finance the profits of the professional dealers but that is beside the point.
It might be that this lense is for two groups of users:
–Professionals who know what and how and who really do not care a bit about what DxO says as long as they get their pictures as they themselves and their clients like them
–Well off amateurs who can well afford expensive gadgets lying around the house with no other purpose but the pleasure they gave while unboxing them.
Which may well be a simplification but in my mind it would explain why I cannot get this lense at about 600 dollars that I would be happy to pay for it. That's what I paid for my 24mm f/1.4 which is impossible to sell anywhere near that price now that the v. II is on the market. What the hell, I do not have to sell it at half the price...yes, definitely you have a point there, Privatebydesign.
(sorry, baking a pizza here on the side sort of caused my line of thinking to shatter)
Privatebydesign has a valuable point there. People paid a lot for something and they'd rather stick with their product than let go of it at a price that might actually close the deal. This might very well be the case. People buy shares and stick to them way past the point where they should have been sold. And those are the ones who finance the profits of the professional dealers but that is beside the point.
It might be that this lense is for two groups of users:
–Professionals who know what and how and who really do not care a bit about what DxO says as long as they get their pictures as they themselves and their clients like them
–Well off amateurs who can well afford expensive gadgets lying around the house with no other purpose but the pleasure they gave while unboxing them.
Which may well be a simplification but in my mind it would explain why I cannot get this lense at about 600 dollars that I would be happy to pay for it. That's what I paid for my 24mm f/1.4 which is impossible to sell anywhere near that price now that the v. II is on the market. What the hell, I do not have to sell it at half the price...yes, definitely you have a point there, Privatebydesign.
(sorry, baking a pizza here on the side sort of caused my line of thinking to shatter)
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