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!!!Originally Posted by dstylezs
Originally Posted by ksteezy
What's this photography team talk??...I'm all in!
This
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!!!Originally Posted by dstylezs
Originally Posted by ksteezy
What's this photography team talk??...I'm all in!
This
Originally Posted by ksteezy
^^^loving the fisheye ^^^bro?
Which one you end up getting?
Fellow 60D user hereOriginally Posted by goldenchild9
Nevermind did some more research and the 60D seems to blow away the 600D in most face to face reviews.
Going with the 60D.
Never tried the Sigma 10mm, but when I tested the Tokina I fell in love with it. I wish I had the $$ for it thoughOriginally Posted by SaNTi0321
Looking into buying a Wide Angle lens.
Looking at the Tokina 11-16mm 2.8 and also the Sigma 10mm 2.8 Fisheye.
I really want a Fisheye but I think the Tokina would be more versatile. If I end up grabbing the Fisheye I can always correct the distortion on shots I don't want to be distorted.. What ya'll think?
Originally Posted by ksteezy
Originally Posted by Air Freshh 23
Hey, does anyone know if sigma lens are good? I was thinkin about the 18-200mm...does anyone have that one?
Sigmas are great, built quality is superb, I think that's the best thing about them...however unless you are goin to use that lense for shootin outdoors with good available light, I would save my money and get a Tamron 28-75 2.8 for everyday use, walk around affordable lense...tamrons have good built quality as well, the cons with these 3rd party lenses is the resale value..they tend to lose value their value
Count me in!!Originally Posted by dstylezs
Originally Posted by ksteezy
What's this photography team talk??...I'm all in!
This
1- Correct. The larger the aperture, the more bokeh (blurriness) you're gonna get. (don't forget, the smaller the number, the wider the aperture)Originally Posted by VoidEmperor
Some quick questions
If I focus on an object and I want the background to be out of focus, I should open up the aperture more right? All around sharp shot designed apperture?
Also, fast shutter speed for moving objects. Slow for still life or portraits, correct?
The thing I'm having some difficulty grasping correctly is the use of the ISO. I understand it's the sensitivity to light, but for what kind of shots would you use different ISO for?
Let's say I wanna shoot a moving car.
Prolly shoot at 500-1K apperture and depending on the light, let's say a f4 apperture
What would be the best ISO setting?
800-32k?
I'm shooting film btw.
Originally Posted by Mr Fongstarr
^^^^Nice dude! Now I don't look like the only idiot that shoots fisheye in here. Haha.
Originally Posted by Mr Fongstarr
^^^^Nice dude! Now I don't look like the only idiot that shoots fisheye in here. Haha.