Camera Strut - wide-angle lenses?
mannybolone
Los Angeles, CA 15,025 Posts
I want to get a wide-angle lens and I want something fast so that pretty much means: no zoom lenses. However, if I'm going to roll fixed, what I'm debating is whether I should go with 20 or 28 (or even smaller). I figured 28 would offer the most options but are there any advantages to going even wider, with say a 20?
Comments
Appreciate it...I figured a 20 might be pushing it, in terms of distortion. Looks like a 28 is what I'm aiming for then.
Ah...
Back in the 35mm days I had a beautiful 17-35mm zoom that cost me a fortune, and is now probably worth nothing. I wanna get a digital slr but I'm curious how wide I have to go to get a fisheye/super wide lens. I know it's a bit of a cliche, but nothing beats if for skating.
Some of the hovels i've photographed actually made me feel a little bad, like I was misleading the buyers. But really that just means i've done my job and gotten them to come to the property.
Wow. I had no idea the difference between traditional and digital was so significant (I don't own a dslr, clearly). So what would, say, an 8mm lens (which is a pretty extreme fisheye on a traditional camera) look like on a digital? And I'll read up on this, but does anyone have a quick explanation as to why there is such a significant difference?
The short explanation is that the sensor on almost all DSLR's is much smaller than a piece of 35mmm film, so the sensor only captures part (the middle, more or less) of what the lens sees. So a 50mm lens on a film camera behaves more like a 75mm lens when used on a DSLR.
One more thing to remember is that even though you can compensate for the focal length issue, you will still have to deal with the lens distortion issues that come with wider angle lenses. For example, a 50mm lens is nice and flattering for a basic portrait on a film camera, but if you use a 33mm lens on DSLR to get the same focal length you will notice that the results might not look as pleasing to the eye, because of the barrel distortion characteristics of the wider lens.