Best Camera Lens for Beginners? 📷
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- Опубликовано: 30 сен 2024
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What lens are you using for this? Looks amazing!
@@NataleeChamplin it's a 15-35 f2.8
All this sounds to me like Chinese language 😂
For a beginner pls just text the brand of the camera (which camera exactly) and which lens for fashion photography and videos. All in One.
@@moni.dojdevskathis is so real😭 now I have to search for the video😅 I love his content though. I’ve just started watching and his tips are really helpful, although I have to watch the video a few times 😅😂😂
If you're a brand new photographer the best camera and lens are the ones you already have.
I have none I just have the camera body😭
@@HoodSwamiif you need a cheap lens, you can get the canon 1.8 aperture 50mm for 99$
@@HoodSwamilol
@HoodSwami I also have same love for photography 😢but affording one is becoming so hard
Bruh
Instead of just focusing on the low light aspect (I've had f3.5-5.6 lenses my while life and you can still work with that), the most significant upgrade anyone will notice is the image quality and sharpness when moving away from the kit lens. Both on Canon and Sony (the systems I've had), kit lenses are not terrible, but kinda bad. They also feel flimsy and non-inspiring.
But yes, after that the aperture size is the most significant thing (for beginners). But there is also a "risk". Many 2.8 lenses so not perform very well at 2.8, and having to stop down to f4 or f5.6 to be really good, and that defeats it's purpose. Lenses that are good at f2.8 are usually very expensive.
So it's all a big compromise and a big labyrinth. Just thought ppl should be aware of that too.
What's the diff in 1.8 then? Sounds like the smaller the f, the better?
@@allan_f2203 the bigger the appeature the more light can come in. good for
low light photography. u can maintain lower iso at low light and still has good exposure. also bigger aperature means more depth of field for that “bokeh” potrait picture
@@kurosenpaiawesome description thanks!
@@allan_f2203yes that’s why you’ll see a 1.4 lens for $300 and a 1.2 for $1,200 it’s ridiculous lol
The kit lens that came with my Canon 6D2 was a Canon 24-105mm f4L. It's actually a really good lens. Not "kinda bad" like the OP stated at all.
Not all cameras are full frame or APS-C. Olympus sells a lot of micro 4/3rds sensor cameras. And of course there's also medium format sensor cameras, but beginners aren't using those.
Depends on which medium you are.
An digital medium-format is super expensive for an mere mortal.
An TLR, or a Mamiya, Bronica etc. can be bought for a fracture of the price of an digital medium-format. That won't change in the next years or decades.
I started with micro 4/3rds on the Yi M1 haha
You forgot the option of micro four thirds. I LOVE my Panasonic LUMIX GH5M2, and my G85. Intuitive to use while I’m learning, not exceptionally heavy or large. I do have a couple zooms, but I love my primes. Though I have a couple better zoom lenses on my wish list. A bit pricey though, I gotta save some $$.
MFT is dead that's why he didn't mention it
@@gamer8622 You living in 2018 bro? MFT is doing just fine.
A few things I’ll add is not all crop sensor cameras are APSC, some are MFT or APSH. Also not all rebels are cropped because there’s the rebel Ti (not T1i)
I chose Sigma 17-50 instead and it's still great.
@mipmipmipmipmipthat’s why you get an adapter which you would get anyways if you have used EF lenses in the past. i have an M50 with a speedbooster and regular adapter to EF lenses and i use sigma lenses a lot
@@itsdomtooOr you just use sigma lenses without adapter on Sony cameras 👀
@@Cl1ckfisch or use the sigma lens for canon cameras? lmao i use my 30mm on my M series i just use my adapter for the bigger ones
For a beginner apsc camera:
17-55 f2.8
35 mm f1.8
50mm f1.8
55-200mm or 55-300mm.
With about 400, it's possible buy all lenses.
What about 55-250mm. Someone recommended it and looks like good.
You are recommending lenses for street, portrait, wildlife and almost every kind of photography. Why would a beginner buy all that without knowing what he wants to do. If he knows what kind of photography he wants to do, he will buy lenses suitable for that. Why would a portrait photographer buy a 55-300mm lens??
@@vivekjha4759yep, and if you want to shoot wildlife, you have no use for 17-55, 35 or the the 50. You need pretty much 200 minimum on an apsc and go longer from there.
400 is not enough for all lenses
50mm f1.8 the first lens I've ever bought 😊
Imo, for someone who is interested in taking good pictures, a decent prime will teach them how to actually compose shots well with their legs and give a much better image quality.
If I were starting out again, I'd buy a 35 or a 50mm equivalent lens and shoot that until I feel like I need to move on.
Zooms usually make begginers stay in one spot and simply compose everything by zooming in.
● Best beginner lens is 28mm F2.8..
Wide enough for indoors & Landscapes. 40mm is great for Portraits because 50mm can be too close. 40mm has practically zero distortion & is very sharp. Walking forward is easier than retreating.
In the beginning my biggest reason for switching to a 2.8 was the fact it didn’t automatically change my f-stop when zooming in/out. That drove me crazy the year I started shooting
No question your first lens beyond your kit lens should be the 50mm 1.8 cheep lens makes bank ....
Olympus m5 mark ii with 12-40 f2.8, second hand. Best value for the money, most freedom in any camera and you don't need to care about the weather. 😊
Virgin small format (fUlL fRaMe) vs Chad medium format
Mft cameras: "I'm not even here, baby. I'm just a hallucination."
I've had a Canon M50 and the kit 15-45 lens for 2 years, built a career in photography with it. I'm just now upgrading to a telephoto lens and a good low light prime in a focal length I use often.
I got all my stuff used or refurbished, many of my jobs that want a particular set of equipment have provided such equipment. Otherwise, I get good photos with what I have. I'm very very greatful for the way I started because it's kinda molded my own personal style, but I'll never tell anyone they should do it the way I did. My way worked for me because it's how I adapted with what I had, the most important things to learn when starting out are framing, what the exposure triangle means/how to use the tradeoffs to your advantage, and (if you do nature, wildlife, outdoors sports, etc. like I do) timing the weather and sunlight in your area to get the shots you want. Oh yeah, whitebalance too. Early on, I had very hard lessons learned about whitebalance. It's probably the least sexy part about photography, so nobody talks about it, but getting whitebalance correct is very helpful.
*Cries in MFT
Mft is great imo, light and you can get 90% of the image quality of full frame. And if that does do it, remember the old adage:
Image quality had almost nothing to do with the quality of an image.
micro four thirds sobbing in the corner 🗿
$480-800 USD it looks like.. yeah I’ll stick to the nifty fifty
Glass is the most important thing when it comes to photography/videography get a cheap 50mm 1.8 atleast they can be had for sub 300
I find it so hard to recommend a crop lens, because as soon as they upgrade they will be forced to buy a brand new lens.
Depending on if they are starting on a dslr or mirrorless first, I’d recommend strictly only EF lenses or only RF lenses for the sake of cost saving over time.
The sigma 17-50 f2.8 is a great alternative. It's around 280€ used and is very well liked
Fuji gfx 100 would like to know your location
I got a brand new cannon r50 and want to do vlogging and basketball videos,any lens recommendations?
Crop sensor cameras are great if you want as much zoom as possible. And although full frame shooters might look down on crop sensor cameras, they're are still 10x better than compact camera and phone sensors.
And if anyone ever tells you your aps-c camera isn't "professional", ask them if they've ever heard of medium format cameras.
I cannot wait to ditch my Sony kit lens. I’ve got my eyes set on a 17-70 f2.8. I absolutely love wide angle shots but just can’t handle how the kit looks.
I choose sigma 18-35mm f/1.8 DC hsm art for my landscape photography 😊
In my opinion, start the game with zoom lens can make beginner confuse because with each focal length there are difference focal effect that lead to the fact the we have to change the composition and the “style” of the picture. With beginner i’m affraid that could’nt catch that idea yet so this will make them frustrated.
If you are a brand new photographer, you need practice and a lot of it.
Beginner has different meaning these days. Zoom lenses with f/2.8 costs a lot of money for a “beginner”
My beginner camera is a Canon R6 Mark ii with an RF 85mm 1.2. Is that good?
Tamron E Mount lens for that spec is $750 😢
Love cameras but man glass is soooo expensive, and yes I realize that lens cost is cheap compared to some.
legacy, manual focus lenses are harder to learn, but affordable and fun to use (I may be biased, as a Fuji guy)
I'm thinking of buying a camera but I'm undecided between sony alpha a6000 vs canon eos 200d, which one would you recommend (for nature, landscape, street photography)
What about Nikon?
Wider aperture opening makes a lense better for low light? Well, yes and no. But rather 'no' I would say! An open aperture lets in more light, true. But it also lowers dramatically the depth of field, which has to be considered in most types of photography. Using ISO for low light instead of wide aperture will lead to better results more often...
Bro, I got a canon 80d with the 17-55 mm 2.8 lens😂
The cheapest best prime lens is a 50mm f1.8. That is the lens I would get any beginner using without sinking huge money.
Ooo i remember when i bought a sigma 17-55 f2.8 (one of the sharpest lenses on that zoom range) for my canon 80d, i got it on the grey market for around 200 euro. An amazing lens, and re-sold it for the same prize.
What’s a fertografer?
My first camera was a phase one 😎 just kidding. I’m broke 😂
Just got my R6 II and the first thing for me is to buy any 24-70 2.8 on the market
Update: my 24-70 broke loose from the mount and now it's broken😓
Oh no! Hope things get better for you 🙏
What's a good camera for a beginner? I'd really appreciate some guidance.
What about Nikon
Can you so a Video about LUMIX g cameras because i have one (g70 With 12-60mm & 45-150mm Lens and a Pol filter/two UV Filters ) but i don't find a Video about it at your Channel
24-70 is trash. 24-100+ will give you everything and you can get 1-2 prime lens after you know which focal length is best for you (again, 24-120 will help with that and 24-70 will not)
What about 18-150 lens on APS type camera (I have R10)
Ummm...
A lot more expensive....
Especially the Canon 17 to 55 although it's pushing 20 years old it's still over $800 new
How about 85mm lens for my Nikon D3300 for Portrait Photography??
bought used 7D body and used 17-50mm f2.8 tamron, pretty happy with it for general use but it's lacking the reach. i kinda want lenses like canon 55-200 i can find it cheap used and 85 f1.8 (new meike brand 85mm lens is actually half the price compared with canon one)
How does a lower f-stop get you smoother looking video footage?
I was going to say the same thing
What's a good camera and lens combo for an upclose(like an interview and 3ft apart) video? Is there anything that can get me to 8k video quality? maybe a 2,000-4,000 camera?
If you can't distinguish between a full frame and an APS C....why not just be happy with your smartphone?
To be honest am not a beginner, but only this is just my hoppy I shot in nikon. I do wildlife and macro.
I buyed a Lumix Gx80, Hate that the sensor is oblitated in low light, next camera is gonna be a full frame, so I could use any lens system with a focal reducer true to the native focal, unlike a MFT with a full frame speedbooster you get 1.7 only, so you can't get native coverage.
I think I would get a S5IIX as it is the best offer ever on the market, I would get a BMCC FF but like .... I would need Lidar, and a Gimbal with me at all time and photo experience is shit if like the bmcc4k
By his short video buy $1200 camera at least and buy $1500 lens. 😂😂😂😂
Big inner $$$ loss. 😂😂
I hear almost every photographer recommend the 18-55 2.8 lens. The 2.8 being the huge part. It must be a good lens. And on Amazon the Nikon one has like 8k reviews and it's like 5 stars.
I have a Sigma 17-50mm f/2.8 on my T6i and it’s served me well for the past few years. It’s a great lens considering you can buy them used in nearly perfect condition for like 200-300 bucks
What would be suggested for plane spotting?
I have no idea what the words are that are coming out of your mouth
u high on weed or smth?
@@randomnetizen7980 nah I just don't know fancy technology words
If i have to buy R 10 today, then should i buy it along with kit lens or without kit lens?
Instead i would buy ef to er adaptor with 50mm prime lens
Please advise..
Yeah there is only full frame or apsc... micro four thirds is not available huh???? 😂 as a G9 user I always feel offended when other photographers act like there is nothing but full frame and apsc. Especially because you can save an enormous amount of money and weight on your gear using micro 4/3 which a big point for a lot of people when the get into a new hobby.
Can you talk about the camera and lens that you’re using for this current video?
hi! im a beginner and a starter in photography, however im thinking of buying the canon eos 250d as my first camera, and could anyone help me out with choosing the right lenses for this camera? Im also thinking of buying the sigma 85mm ft.14, but im not sure if its compatible with the camera.
Me: cool where to buy
Canon: “and your total will be 1799$ not including the filter.”
Me: *ohhhh, yeaaaaahhhhh,,, about that.*
“These are the camera lenSES that I would recommend”
Proceeds to talk about full frame and cropped sensor cameras and then recommends ONE lens.
🤦♂️
I would really need your mentorship. I would love to start video contents creation
All fuji cameras are APSC except from GFX line which are Medium Formar (Bigger than Full Frame)
Can I shoot a selfie video like yours with a kit lens on a 2013 Sony A7? Or how can I do so with that body? What lens and settings? Thank you 🙏🏼
Could you please recommended something cheap, but making still good quality photos and videos for taking of cars?
Include panasonic please
I got 18-55 to my Canon 250D. Plz respond in need help from every best photographers to learn 😩
You also don’t need to choose a canon camera system..any system you want to use is fine lol
I really need some help. I want to buy a camera as a starter and someone is selling a Canon 1200D with the 18-55mm lens. Is it worth to buy?! I don't have a lot of money now and they say it is good for the price. Which is less than the market of my country.
Hey @AnthonyGugliotta what do you recommend for the eos m200. I’m looking for a lens to take photos of the moon/night sky?
Idk but I prefer to buy third party lens that have 1.4 to 2.8 aperture less expensive and budget friendly for beginners like me.
What begginer lens to buy depends on what you want to shoot. I'm not going to buy lenses you show if I dont want to photograph landscapes or people.
If I want to photograph products and macro, these lenses would be the waist of my money.
Most of photography youtubers talk like we all shoot people and views, one lens is not for everyone/every purpose.
f2.8 is going to be A LOT MORE EXPENSIVE
My man, that is a 800€ lens you show here... a beginner should not spend that kind of money.
I’m lucky I got my Fuji with the XF 18-55 f2.8; great all-rounder already
Does cheap dslr camera body with expensive portrait lens works?
A go to for zoom lenses will be 24-70 or 18-35 from Sigma Art 😉✨ these are dope, I mean for those who aren’t really handy with prime lenses
I got for the camera U have access to learn / try. Rent barrow go w/ a friend. Save your money until U know. Then start used.
i have a nikon 5200 with 18-140 lans is this good for shuting youtube
Best beginner advice given by a beginner is not always the best.
Kit lens for Nikon Z is the 24-70 f4, which is fantastic. Best kit lens ever.
i hvthe 16-55 what would you recommend?
can any soul tell me which type of camera is the Nikon d5300 is it full lens or crop?
what is your thoughts on the Nikon d3100
I replaced the 18-55 kit lens with that 17-55 USM. Omg what a difference. That lens is baller on the crop sensor Canons.
But what about beginner film photography?
No goddam brand new photographer has a full frame camera jesus christ
What 40mm f2.8 pancake lens
It does not matter what cam You use. Not at all. The matter is if You know how to use it the best way
That’s what she said
What if you have a 17.5 -45mm lens?
A little bit more expensive is an understatement camera gear is the most criminally expensive equipment in any hobby period
Can you please learn how to pronounce photographer correctly?? It's not fertographer.
my first lens is going to be the Sigma 16mm f/1.4 for my a6500, not sure i’m going to get much use out of the 16-50mm Sony kit lens so i had to invest in a good one, very excited.
Do you recommend the camera in your left hand(80D) to a beginner?
A little bit (a lot) more expensive.
If the camera lens is round then why is the picture rectangular 💀
Bro which camera you recommend for shooting dance in temple dance programme at evening or in night?
Prime lenses are higher quality and make you think more creatively
Sigma 18-35 F1.8 is the best beginner do it all lens
which cameras would be good for beginners? preferably cheap ._.
Canon m50 or sony a6000
Depends on it's use case and if you want to shoot mirrorless or dslr. Purely for photography the Pentax k-70 could be a good option. I got mine in a kit for less than 500€. It is weather sealed, has image stabilization and the image quality is amazing. I also like the flip-out screen and two control dials. The main weak points would be the (comparably) weak auto focus and video quality.
If it needs to be cheaper than that maybe have a look at the used market. The entry class cameras haven't changed much in the last 5 years