If you have a 24-70 and a fullframe camera, you can turn on the APS-C mode and now you have a 35-105 lens without spending in another lens. You will not notice a difference in video, and in photos they will be 10mpx if you have a 24mpx sensor or 24mpx if you have a 48mpx sensor, so it's useful too
Excellent information. The 70-200mm is most useful for video recording events where you can't move forward. Still worthy to keep around. I use my Tamron 28-75mm lens on my A6700, which I might upgrade to an A7 IV.
This is good information. Right now I have a 24-70 2.8, 35-150 2.8-4 and a 35mm 1.8 but I really love shooting my 35-150 but I’m not sure if it will be good for weddings or low light situations. What do you think?
@@thecadillacoftokyo8788 it should definitely be good for weddings with a caveat: if the max aperture is f/4, it may be difficult to get full families in focus unless you really focus on having their faces lined up close to the same plane (I will be releasing an aperture video soon). For lighting, there will be situations where you need more light, but that’s what flash is for!
Broooo how are you only at 197 subs?! No way! Anyway, I totally agree, 24-70mm is hands down the most versatile lens for most cases. Great breakdown and straight to the point 👌🏽 love the vibes bro and thanks for calling me out about my camera collecting dust 🤣 it’s time to pick it up again, long overdue! You got a new sub here 😎
great points. these two are definitely the most capable, bread and butter lenses. definitely agree with keeping an eye out for used deals as people move on to different systems or newer releases. some great lenses out there for half price!
My mainly used combo for weddings and family since over 10 years are two full frame bodys with 35 1.4 + 85 1.2(or 1.4). if i need more reach for example to get a laughing couple at a far away desk during reception i either incorporate the surroundings into the frame or crop it out later. no hesitation there today with 45mpixel+ capable high iso and pinpoint eye focus, wasn´t this easy 15 years ago. If i could only take one camera and lens it would either be a 24-70 or simply a fast and sharp 50 depending on the job.
The difference is are you shooting photos or creating art, if your business model is just shooting photos of weddings and events sure the zooms will be your bread and butter, but if photography is your art and that’s what you’re out to create, primes are the brushes of the masters in this craft from street, photo journalism and portraiture to fine art it’s all primes.
Love this comment!!! I love the versatility of zoom lenses, especially when I have limited time during a session OR for events including weddings. But I also love primes and are usually lighter depending on the aperture.
I subbed your channel. I feel your genuine experience. Really glad for the info. Help me to understand what lens should i get. I’m more into video. 24-70 may be the best option. But still it is heavy. I have sony ZVE1, maybe i should look into 24-50mm f2.8 that sony has released.
Well I just got the 6700, and I'm going for the 16-55 over the 25-70 cuz of the 1.5 crop sensor. I'm also looking forward into a 70-200 F4 Macro in the future
@@tanner.quintero sounds like a strong kit! 16-55 is a tremendous lens and covers a little more than a full frame 24-70, I use mine on my 6700 almost all the time
If to make money, you need full frame, there's something off. For crop sensors, the lens that's closest to 85mm in function is going to be a 60mm macro. This is a great moneymaker because it handles the portrait and close-up scenarios perfectly. The 24-70 CONSTANT APERTURE is fantastic - but variable aperture lenses are inconsistent with regard to style and colour. The bigger choice is f/2.8 or f/4 for this lens. Rather get a second hand f/2.8 than a new f/4 and shoot at f/4 or smaller. f/2.8 is for missing focus. The Canon 24-105 f/4 is an exception It's the best kit lens out there for utility. Everyone should spend a day and night with an 85mm on a crop body.
If you have a 24-70 and a fullframe camera, you can turn on the APS-C mode and now you have a 35-105 lens without spending in another lens. You will not notice a difference in video, and in photos they will be 10mpx if you have a 24mpx sensor or 24mpx if you have a 48mpx sensor, so it's useful too
Solid Video! Agree with what you shared. I've overbought too and realize less is actually more.
Excellent information. The 70-200mm is most useful for video recording events where you can't move forward. Still worthy to keep around. I use my Tamron 28-75mm lens on my A6700, which I might upgrade to an A7 IV.
This is good information. Right now I have a 24-70 2.8, 35-150 2.8-4 and a 35mm 1.8 but I really love shooting my 35-150 but I’m not sure if it will be good for weddings or low light situations. What do you think?
@@thecadillacoftokyo8788 it should definitely be good for weddings with a caveat: if the max aperture is f/4, it may be difficult to get full families in focus unless you really focus on having their faces lined up close to the same plane (I will be releasing an aperture video soon).
For lighting, there will be situations where you need more light, but that’s what flash is for!
Broooo how are you only at 197 subs?! No way! Anyway, I totally agree, 24-70mm is hands down the most versatile lens for most cases.
Great breakdown and straight to the point 👌🏽 love the vibes bro and thanks for calling me out about my camera collecting dust 🤣 it’s time to pick it up again, long overdue!
You got a new sub here 😎
@@HippieScientist welcome to the family! And thank you for the encouragement, excited to push the content up a level!
Amazing explanation, really helpful, was surprised to see after the video that you do not have more subscribers
@@cr1926 thank you! Hopefully that will change as the channel provides more value, excited to see where the summer takes us!
great points. these two are definitely the most capable, bread and butter lenses. definitely agree with keeping an eye out for used deals as people move on to different systems or newer releases. some great lenses out there for half price!
My mainly used combo for weddings and family since over 10 years are two full frame bodys with 35 1.4 + 85 1.2(or 1.4). if i need more reach for example to get a laughing couple at a far away desk during reception i either incorporate the surroundings into the frame or crop it out later. no hesitation there today with 45mpixel+ capable high iso and pinpoint eye focus, wasn´t this easy 15 years ago.
If i could only take one camera and lens it would either be a 24-70 or simply a fast and sharp 50 depending on the job.
Great video. Nice to meet you in person a couple weeks ago. Keep up the great work!
@@MonteWeaverofficial i see you’ve been doing your thing too, that’s amazing!
The difference is are you shooting photos or creating art, if your business model is just shooting photos of weddings and events sure the zooms will be your bread and butter, but if photography is your art and that’s what you’re out to create, primes are the brushes of the masters in this craft from street, photo journalism and portraiture to fine art it’s all primes.
Love this comment!!! I love the versatility of zoom lenses, especially when I have limited time during a session OR for events including weddings. But I also love primes and are usually lighter depending on the aperture.
I subbed your channel. I feel your genuine experience. Really glad for the info. Help me to understand what lens should i get. I’m more into video. 24-70 may be the best option. But still it is heavy. I have sony ZVE1, maybe i should look into 24-50mm f2.8 that sony has released.
Well I just got the 6700, and I'm going for the 16-55 over the 25-70 cuz of the 1.5 crop sensor. I'm also looking forward into a 70-200 F4 Macro in the future
@@tanner.quintero sounds like a strong kit! 16-55 is a tremendous lens and covers a little more than a full frame 24-70, I use mine on my 6700 almost all the time
What do you think about the Tamron 35-150 over the 24-70?
Sound?
How can i get good audio in my videos using Mirrorless Cameras?
Currently using Canon R6
Tamron makes a 35-150 f2.8….def a great lens to check out
If to make money, you need full frame, there's something off.
For crop sensors, the lens that's closest to 85mm in function is going to be a 60mm macro. This is a great moneymaker because it handles the portrait and close-up scenarios perfectly.
The 24-70 CONSTANT APERTURE is fantastic - but variable aperture lenses are inconsistent with regard to style and colour.
The bigger choice is f/2.8 or f/4 for this lens. Rather get a second hand f/2.8 than a new f/4 and shoot at f/4 or smaller. f/2.8 is for missing focus.
The Canon 24-105 f/4 is an exception It's the best kit lens out there for utility.
Everyone should spend a day and night with an 85mm on a crop body.