Thursday, May 24, 2012

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Different Lenses for several Subjects

by Amos Navarro

There's a dizzying range of choices with regards to selecting lenses for SLR cameras. From wide angle to telephoto, zoom to prime lenses, fish eye, fast lenses, wide aperture lenses, the options seems to be impossible. It isn't truly. Just what boils down to is asking yourself a simple question: What do I want to shoot?

In case you are just starting in photography, then chances are you are still experimenting and learning anything you prefer to shoot. You may shoot a few family portraits one day and landscapes from your holidays the next. Then again, you could have decided immediately that you just love taking pictures of wild animals and this also is all you want to do. Either way, the lenses required to acquire the best out of these subjects differ greatly.

To match an expansive landscape image into your viewfinder, you should need a wide angle lens. Nonetheless, seeking to require a portrait with similar lens would cause a tiny little person but not much else in the frame if you aren't directly in that person's face and smelling their breath. When trying to take a picture of a wild bear from 100 or more meters away is simply impossible (and you really don't want to get any nearer to a wild bear). In a perfect world you'd probably get 3 different lenses for every of these subjects. But also in a perfect world you'd be also a millionaire and be able to afford them all. Hence the thing to do is always to decide what sort of photography you're interested in and choose your lenses appropriately.

Length: Zoom against Prime

You will find benefits to using both zoom lenses and prime (fixed or non zoom) lenses. Similarly, zoom lenses are versatile, and minimize the need for a whole bag filled with lenses that you must change and change again when you're out shooting. However, a high quality prime lens could be gold. Prime lenses, if they are well built, generally create a crisper, higher quality image, mainly because they've got fewer pieces of glass and moveable parts.

Therefore the light coming in doesn't have to pass through as many objects and therefore is less diffused. One other great advantage of prime lenses is usually that for this reason, they have an inclination to be "faster" than zoom lenses. Basically, which means you should use slower shutter speeds as the lens needs a lot less light to generate a correct exposure. This is especially helpful if you would like take portraits along with available light.



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New Unique Article!

Title: Different Lenses for several Subjects
Author: Amos Navarro
Email: nancyphotogbooks@gmail.com
Keywords: photography,camera,gadget,career,profession,work,job,education
Word Count: 426
Category: Hobbies
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