privatebydesign said:slclick said:More and more I hear comments about how the 28mm perspective is favored by a lot of shooters. And why not? To each their own. All FL's are awesome in particular situations and framing scenarios. I think this would make a fantastic addition to the L lineup if it's anything like the 35 1.4 mk2. Personally, I am liking having my 24, 28 and 35 all in one fat pickle jar.
I currently have 8 lenses for sale, the one that has had least interest shown in it is the EF 28mm f2.8 IS. Which I am a little surprised about............
The problem I think, is that it feels too close to the 35mm f2 IS which is brighter, and the other way people will opt for the 24mm for a compact wide. I wanted to replace my 24 Art for event shooting with something a lot lighter and ended up buying this 28mm because it came up half price of retail second hand - the demand is so low.
Honestly, between 24mm and 28mm I think i came out with the more practical length. I love it.
All that 18-35mm does is highlight how absurdly poor fast prime choices are for crop. Fuji make have capitilised on this with their crop lens range. The 23mm f1.4 and 56mm f1.2 show that they 'get it.' While the market might not be there for premium crop primes with Canon/Nikon, some small competitively priced primes (like the 24 pancake) would really 'complete' the lineup for crop cameras.ecka said:Maybe it was, until Sigma 30/1.4 showed up and now it's in the Art league. But the real game changer was the 18-35/1.8 (and now 50-100/1.8), so the whole 'fast prime on crop' concept has changed. Perhaps EF-S 28/1.2 USM (sub-$1k) could bring back some fans. Otherwise, the 35/2 IS USM serves the same purpose, pretty much.
Upvote
0