I'm new to plane spotting and have a question:
What kind of lenses do I need? (I shoot Canon)
I'm new to plane spotting and have a question:
What kind of lenses do I need? (I shoot Canon)
A little L goes a long way.
I use the 100-400mm and the 24-70mm.
Welcome to the site. :)
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and you get good shots with these?
A little L goes a long way.
This is coming from a nikon user.... but everything I've heard about the 100-400 is nothing but great comments. It sure beats the nikon counterpart (80-400VR).
Patrick O --- Staten Island, NY
I shoot Canon also, and like Phil, use the 100-400mm L for much of my aircraft spotting. It's one of the most popular Canon lenses among aviation photographers. Shooting around JFK, you really need the reach. I also have the 70-200mm 2.8 L when I need something shorter, as well as a couple of other Canon lenses for every day use.
You tell me...these were all shot with the 100-400LOriginally Posted by CanonKid
KC-135 - Passing gas & taking names!
http://www.jetphotos.net/showphotos.php?userid=15086
http://moose135.smugmug.com
Do a search for "phil derner" on Anet and make your own decision I guess. I'm pleased with what I've gotten with the lens over the years.Originally Posted by CanonKid
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Wow guys thanks for the help.
A little L goes a long way.
Is this the ideal setup for taking photos of aviation? If anybody has anything I should change or anything I should add please let me know.
FF:
-17-40mm f/4L
-24-105mm f/4L IS
-70-200mm f/4L IS
-100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS
-430/580EX
Crop:
-10-22mm f/3.5-4.5
-24-105mm f/4L IS
-70-200mm f/4L IS
-100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS
__________________
A little L goes a long way.
5 years ago when i chased Concorde at LHR my EOS 3 SLR had a Tokina 80-400mm + x 1.5 converter for long range photos or used a x2 converter + Tokina 80-400mm if there was enough light, i never had to manual focus, the camera did it on full auto focus.
If was near the Concorde crossing at Heathrow i used a Tamron 24-105mm zoom.
I got good results with the lenses but the Canon 100-400L is the best lense around and i would have got much crisper photos due to less lense shake, but at the time the Canon lens was £1500 ($3000 at 2003 prices), the Tokina was £600 ($1200 at 2003 prices) which offered the same zoom range as the Canon so i got the Tokina.
It just seems like the Canon 100-400L is a bit small, but i dont know.
A little L goes a long way.
Small? Physically? Serious?
And that's not even with the lens hood.
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WOW. Nevermind, I guess I've only seen them not extended all the way.
A little L goes a long way.
Actually, that photo looks as though it's actually the actual size, actually.
Email me anytime at [email protected].
I have a kit 17-85mm 4.0-5.6 which I only really use for close ups, but then I have a 70-200 F2.8L IS which is fantastic for when you're somewhat close, and then I have a 300mm F4.0L IS which has great reach and is incredibly sharp...sharper than the 100-400 from what reviews tell me. Add a 1.4X teleconverter and you have yourself a 420mm F5.6 with IS...another great setup. Guess it all depends on whether you want a zoom or a prime.
Have you ever seen a grown man naked?
I believe that those are all fine lenses and if you need a certain focal range, all of them would be good choices. I have the 17-40 and the 70-200 (mine is non-IS). That said, I don't know of too many photographers that regularly plane spot that use the 24-105 frequently. I suppose that it would be wide enough for most of the wide angles that I do with the 17-40 since I am normally closer to the 40 end, but it is a more exensive lense and I am always looking for bang for the buck as opposed to ideal.Originally Posted by CanonKid
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