It's not just dragons or damsels but also larger butterflies especially of Papilionidae family, whole bunch of lizards(especially skinks) are skittish at best. I know quite a few people who shoot using 100-400mm II lens just for the convenience of that longer working distance. Most of these people dont use a flash and rather prefer using natural light to take photos as flashes cannot cover the distance efficiently.Don Haines said:ahsanford said:Kit. said:Maybe because it's unusable (the minimum focus distance is too short to meaningfully illuminate most scenes)?ahsanford said:Canon has a 0.7x max mag zoom L lens that works only on the longest focal length. It's funny that I seem to hear about 3x more about the marvel of the 100-400L II's and Tamron 35's max magnification than I do about the 24-70 f/4L IS. Why is that?
Forgive my ignorance, but are people actually softboxing or macro-speedliting their 100-400L II at MFD for macro work? Is this a preferable setup for the dragonfly and poisonous varmint folks? That seems like quite a production for something not expressly fashioned to serve that need. (Why not a long 180mm macro with 1:1?)
I am not arguing the working distance of the 24-70 is ideal. I am just continually perplexed why folks rave about MFD leading to a 0.3x max mag in the 100-400L II or 0.4x in a Tamron 35 prime while no one seems to talk about what I believe is a far more impressive 0.7x plopped into an L standard zoom. My 100L (for handheld floral macro work or very casual 'oh neat, I see a lizard on a hike' purposes) hasn't traveled with me since I got the 24-70 f/4L IS. For casual macro like that, the working distance is indeed very short, but I just frame / position the camera to avoid shading the subject.
- A
I find that dragonflies fly away when I try to squish them with the front element of the 100L..... you really do need a longer focal length for them....
That said, I think the 24-70 F4 is one of Canon’s under appreciated gems. When you are on foot, it is light, functions very well, and has a semi-macro mode. You can have a very portable walk-about kit with it and the 70-200 F4 IS... yes there are faster lenses, but it costs you weight, space, and dollars to get them
Upvote
0