nightfly
Well-known
Patrick thanks for the info. I like your model shots with the 50 1.4. The vignetting works for you.
Patrick thanks for the info. I like your model shots with the 50 1.4. The vignetting works for you.
An FYI those not familiar with Canon all the EOS lens allow manual focusing and in fact a lot of them have full time manual override which allows you to manually focus even it the lens is set on auto focus.
Also when actually shooting the only difference between the 5D and most 35mm film SLR is the aperture controls are on the body instead of the lens, and no you don't need a menu to access them.
The D700 is an outstanding camera...a fantasy for SLR shooters. It will squeeze the best technical image out of any situation, and that's important when somebody else is paying you to get that shot.
I use the 50L on an old 5D (mark I, with no micro-adjustment) and the focus is spot-on. I may just be lucky, but somehow I don't think so. My EF and EF-S lenses have always focused as they should on a succession of Canon bodies and think that's likely the rule rather than the exception.Same with the Canon 50L - another huge lens. I have this now. Again, great bokeh (still, i think the Sigma's is better), but it requires the micro adjustment feature.
There is also a Canon 28mm f2.8 lens - smaller than the 1.8 version.
The Zeiss 50mm 1.4 for Canon looks really compelling. Rich, creamy Zeiss bokeh on a FF sensor for >$1k.
Maybe the M9 is just a marketing ploy by Canon to make the 5D seem like a bargain.
I found the D700 to be quite behind the 5D in resolution and "punch". I owned both cameras and high end lenses.
That sounds like canonist gospel and not... close to fact.. 🙂 The d700 is, objectively speaking from most tests avilable, resolving more than the 5d mk1, and punch? well, define "punch"...