I sold my Canon 35mm II, the one with the Blue Goo, and bought in the new Tamron 35mm with VC.
The quick impressions, with both fresh in my mind (although I didn't have them side-by-side)....
- The VC on the Tammy gives me what I feel is about 2 stops of stabilization. That's the key benefit (aside from $1100 of additional cash) from the Canon.
- In exchange for the two stops, you get some significant color aberration, with fringing in the corners. This is only in some shots with extreme contrast. To give you some perspective, shooting a page of black and white text won't show it, but shoot a scene with metallic highlights blown in the corners, and it'll be readily apparent. It's not in many images, and cleaned up nicely in post.
- Other Tammy benefits include huge weight and size reductions over the Canon.
- The image quality is really remarkably good. It is better than my Sigma 18-35 Art at 35mm, and that is really saying something.
- The lens did not require any calibration (dumb luck), and I don't believe the 35 is compatible with the new Tamron dock, although perhaps a future firmware release will change that.
All-in-all, I'm very, very pleased so far. I prefer the Tammy over the Canon for the weight and length; the quality is on par (probably slightly softer in some peeping fashion); and the VC is heaven-sent when you're taking pictures outdoors at 8 p.m.
Looking forward to the 85mm version.
The quick impressions, with both fresh in my mind (although I didn't have them side-by-side)....
- The VC on the Tammy gives me what I feel is about 2 stops of stabilization. That's the key benefit (aside from $1100 of additional cash) from the Canon.
- In exchange for the two stops, you get some significant color aberration, with fringing in the corners. This is only in some shots with extreme contrast. To give you some perspective, shooting a page of black and white text won't show it, but shoot a scene with metallic highlights blown in the corners, and it'll be readily apparent. It's not in many images, and cleaned up nicely in post.
- Other Tammy benefits include huge weight and size reductions over the Canon.
- The image quality is really remarkably good. It is better than my Sigma 18-35 Art at 35mm, and that is really saying something.
- The lens did not require any calibration (dumb luck), and I don't believe the 35 is compatible with the new Tamron dock, although perhaps a future firmware release will change that.
All-in-all, I'm very, very pleased so far. I prefer the Tammy over the Canon for the weight and length; the quality is on par (probably slightly softer in some peeping fashion); and the VC is heaven-sent when you're taking pictures outdoors at 8 p.m.
Looking forward to the 85mm version.