The Blue Mesmer by Dustin Abbott, on Flickr
Full Moon Rising (Sigma 24-35 ART Review) by Dustin Abbott, on Flickr
Sigma ART (Series) by Dustin Abbott, on Flickr
Dog Days of Summer (Sigma 24-35 f/2 ART) by Dustin Abbott, on FlickrTWI by Dustin Abbott said:One last thing: the rather tepid response to both this review and the one from Bryan Carnethan tells me that people are not exactly excited by the prospect of this lens. I'm a little skeptical that it will have the commercial success that the 18-35 ART for crop sensors did.
TWI by Dustin Abbott said:One last thing: the rather tepid response to both this review and the one from Bryan Carnethan tells me that people are not exactly excited by the prospect of this lens. I'm a little skeptical that it will have the commercial success that the 18-35 ART for crop sensors did.
TWI by Dustin Abbott said:One last thing: the rather tepid response to both this review and the one from Bryan Carnethan tells me that people are not exactly excited by the prospect of this lens. I'm a little skeptical that it will have the commercial success that the 18-35 ART for crop sensors did.
Random Orbits said:TWI by Dustin Abbott said:One last thing: the rather tepid response to both this review and the one from Bryan Carnethan tells me that people are not exactly excited by the prospect of this lens. I'm a little skeptical that it will have the commercial success that the 18-35 ART for crop sensors did.
+1. The 24-105A competing against white box 24-105L at 600 was a head-scratcher. This design is another. Perhaps if it had no coma, it could have found its way as an astro lens. If it had been 24-50 f/2 (near 2x zoom like the 18-35A), I think it would have created a lot more buzz. Then it would have hit 2 (24 and 50) of the focal lengths used for prime wedding setups and saved a "body". As it is, you lose a stop and gain a heavier lens, but you haven't reduced the total gear count.
wockawocka said:Unless you have a 5Dsr, then you reach out via the crop. A lot of the time I enjoy close quarters work with the 24-35 and the 85L across two 5DSr's.
Works really well.
jd7 said:I saw one of these lenses in a shop yesterday - it's a hefty piece of kit!! It certainly made the 50 Art and 35 Art primes sitting near it look pretty small. And I guess it probably indicates we aren't likely to see the mythical 24-70 f/2 any time soon.
(OK, it's nothing like a the size or weight of a super-tele, but given the focal lengths we're talking about, it's hefty.)
TWI by Dustin Abbott said:Good points all. I've already had questions from people cross-shopping 24-70's and this lens. Assuming your second body has a 70-200 (or similar tele) on it, there's a pretty big gap after 35mm that a 24-70 doesn't leave. And frankly there are few situations I'm in where an f/2.8 lens simply cannot do what an f/2 could.
The sad thing is that this is a great lens in a lot of ways...it's just that its very existence is so confining.
[email protected] said:This is my next lens purchase. I have the 50 Art and a Canon 70-200, so I'm looking at a wide zoom to round out my troika.
The choices considered:
- Canon 16-35 f/4 IS
- Tamron 15-30 f/2.8 VC
- Sigma 24-35 f/2
I eliminated the Canon because f/4 is just too narrow given some indoor shooting I do. Especially as it often involves moving children.
I was hot on the Tamron for a while, but direct comparisons of image quality show the Sigma to be superior. I really do like the VC of the Tamron, though.
So I'm buying the Sigma, because the f/2 will let me freeze the indoor movement more than any other lens competing in the range. OS would have been nice, but it wouldn't help me freeze a running toddler. I also like the superior autofocus micro adjustment capabilities (even though it's long and tedious to do).
I do wish they made more of an attempt to weather seal, and to add image stabilization. The narrow range is not a problem for me, as I was looking for that range anyway. I think people may underestimate the demand for this lens for those of us who've fallen in love with our Sigma 50mm Arts. When you try to use that lens as often as possible, you do need a wide and a telephoto zoom to complement. The 24-35 is just about perfect for that on the wide end.
Hector1970 said:Great review Dustin.
I must say I love the images you produced.
This probably not just because the lens is good but mainly because the photographer is good.
It looks a good lens.
It's big drawback is that it's such a short focal length.
The 24-70 and 24-105 cover this focal length so it would need to build a reputation as being stunning to compete.
You certainly have done a good turn of it.
I wouldn't have noticed it otherwise.