Nikon Lenses- switching from Canon

Well thanks to those that helped answer the question. Seems a few have gone off topic and are attacking each other. No need for that on a helpful forum.

Can a mod please close this thread before it gets out of hand and I'll ask elsewhere.
Thanks again.
 
Cherokee, I think we are big enough and ugly enough to sort ourselves out. We are big boys and girls now.:thumbs:

In answer to your question, the Nikon line up that give the very best quality are all fixed f-stop (so the zooms that are f2.8) much the same as Canon really, if you use a bit of lateral thinking.

On the Vr front - I NEVER use it to overcome handshake woes, I use technique fo rthat. Where it does come into its own is for creative effects. Effects that you can simply not get without it. If you use VR with high shutter speeds, very often it causes ghosting - almost like a double image. High shutter speeds = TURN IT OFF!

marginal shutter speeds,so around the 1/250 on a 300mm, 1/160 on a 200mm etc (on full frame...don't forget your focal length/speed needs to be matched to the resultant focal length of any crop sensor, so a 300mm becomes a 500mm and so the shutter has to go to 1/500 to match...and so on.)

BELOW matched shutter speed to focal length in use, then VR comes into its own....take the wide angle lens down to 1/2 second and pan a bicycle going past, then VR gives you results that fill flash even on 2nd curtain cannot give you - totally different results to introduce deliberate blr with sharp subject areas.

I agree to some extent that good technique should be used for sharpness, not IS/VR - but to say it isn't of use is rubbish. It gives some great creative effects on moving subjects - I could never do powerboat to powerboat shots with the 200mm at around 1/60th and get PIN SHARP boat with streaked sea or background otherwise.

SLOW moving things can be rendered so they look like they are doing 100mph too (just look in EVO an dother car mags to see shots of cars that are being pushed at walking pace, looking like they are on the ragged edge!
 
Don't you have to get AFS Lenses with a Nikon if you want automatic fousing?
 
Don't have any yet but been looking at the D3000 and the D5000
 
Don't have any yet but been looking at the D3000 and the D5000

Ah, righto. If you buy either of these you will need AFS lenses AFAIK.

D200 and upwards you don`t need AFS lenses, not sure on the D90/80, never had one.
 
because those bodys have an inbuilt focus motor with a screw drive :)

i kinda like the AFS lenses though, they just seem a bit more direct :thinking::shrug:
 
thanks all
looks like its going to be the 14-24 f2.8 as I'm not to keen on zooming too much would rather zoom my feet as thats how I learned with film and primes. Now to find the best price or maybe Nikons new 16-35?
 
thanks all
looks like its going to be the 14-24 f2.8 as I'm not to keen on zooming too much would rather zoom my feet as thats how I learned with film and primes. Now to find the best price or maybe Nikons new 16-35?

I you are getting the 14-24 soon PM me as I have a £100 discount voucher.
 
thanks for the offer- who's it with?

Give Stuart at digital depot a pm about the lens and mention the voucher. The voucher is from wheels' camera. There are a number of different vouchers including a grip discount. If anyone uses one if the vouchers it would be expected that they make a small donation to the disabled togs fund but if you save £100 and donate £25 you are still quids in! :)
 
Give Stuart at digital depot a pm about the lens and mention the voucher. The voucher is from wheels' camera. There are a number of different vouchers including a grip discount. If anyone uses one if the vouchers it would be expected that they make a small donation to the disabled togs fund but if you save £100 and donate £25 you are still quids in! :)

sounds good....and fair.... wheres Digital depot?
 
Sorry Richard, but if i`m doing landscape type crap, I shove it on a tripod.

If i`m using it at a wedding I use fill flash.

If i`m using it for habitat stuff, it is on a tripod.

VR or IS or the latest marketing gimmick doesn`t cut it with me i`m afraid. Maybe on long lenses, yes,wide angle.......................:shrug:

You've only listed a few situations where alternatives would work over VR. There are SO many situations (for me, at least) where I don't want to, or can't carry a tripod, and that VR works very, very well for.

One example. Last week I was in the jungle in Ecuador. Light was low (as you'd expect) and the rain was heavy. There's no way I would want to use a tripod in this situation, or carry one!

VR vs 2 stops higher iso (or more)? Yes please!

I'm taking photos of friends outside in the evening. Onboard flash is nasty. I'm already on the acceptable ISO limit of 1600 on the D300. VR saves me from ISO 6400. Win.

Even on wide angles or shorter focal lengths. 18mm with VR means I can get pin sharp photos at 1/2 a second with a slight bracing against the wall with my elbows. VR on wide angles means bye bye tripod, with a lot more possibilities opened up!

VR is great for the times that you don't or can't plan for. :thumbs:
 
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