ZeissFan
Veteran
So, does anyone shoot Canon with Canon lenses? It seems that a lot of people who are buying Canon bodies are using them with lenses from other camera makers.
So, does anyone shoot Canon with Canon lenses? It seems that a lot of people who are buying Canon bodies are using them with lenses from other camera makers.
the vast majority of canon users never use anything other than canon lenses, this trend is mainly yet another microcosm of the internet that seems to be based loosely around rff.
I use some canon lenses. AF is useful and good, so my 50, 85 and 100 macro get a lot of use. A couple of zooms (24-105 and 70-200 f4) get a bit less, but I bought the Zeiss wides because they do what I need, and cost less than the canon L wides
Mike
Interesting thread. Something along the same lines of what I've been investigating.
Problem is that there seems to be a lot of internet chatter of serious vignetting with the 5d and wide apertures.
Not sure if it's any better with the D700.
a) What would be the lowest priced body only Canon Dslr producing a decent ISO 1600 (it can be "decent through RAW only").
b) How would you accurately focus with that model a standard manual focus lens ? I mean what built in aid that camera provides you for manual focusing ?
So, does anyone shoot Canon with Canon lenses? It seems that a lot of people who are buying Canon bodies are using them with lenses from other camera makers.
So, does anyone shoot Canon with Canon lenses? It seems that a lot of people who are buying Canon bodies are using them with lenses from other camera makers.
Yep, that sums it up nicely - except I don;t like the small viewfinders of the APS-C cameras.
So the question then becomes which is the crop factor in those smaller sensor Canon dslrs. Is there any formula to calculate the crop factor by calculating the sensor diagonal ?
The lenses I want to use are those from the old OM Zuiko line.