got the older version thats got IS its called a tripod lol it does look a nice bit of kit though
unless you are mainly doing floral photography or studio portraits it is an issue. Even Manfrotto tripod is pain to set up at ground level, and with bugs it is nearly impossible to set up on time (unless you also use pins). f/2.8 sharpness and saturation should be better with L glass too.
I have the non IS version, and I would like IS but mainly for when I'm not using it as a Macro lens I think.
I'm new to Macro, but I've found that you need flash and an aperture of around f8 to get a bit of depth of field. I don't use autofocus but set the focus and then move the camera relative to the subject to get the bit I want in focus. Flash sets the shutter at 1/250th which is enough to get away from shake at 100mm focal length isn't it?
I've not had the lens all that long and so I can't claim brilliant results but I'm sure it must be possible to get them without IS.
Perhaps I'm wrong. Do other Macro lenses already have IS?
IS / VR is pointless in a macro lens.
The main issue with macro is shallow depth of field. If you are handholding you are more likely to sway backwards and forwards - therefore going go outside your tiny depth of field.
IS only counters x or y axis shake not forward / backward motion.
And to be honest, I am using my 100mm for many other things including portraits and concerts.
Sounds like you need the 85mm f/1.8 to me then. Not a relatively slow f/2.8 lens.... don't see how IS is going to help either there, for concerts you need shutter speed to freeze subject motion.
Remember we are still talking about RRP on a new product. The current 100mm macro is RRP £610 and sells for £425 on CPB, so applying the same RRP to actual price ratio to the new lens makes it £700.
It comes with a lens hood and should be better quality and has this new trick angular and linear hybrid IS system. At £700 it seems pretty reasonable to me.
It comes with a lens hood and should be better quality and has this new trick angular and linear hybrid IS system. At £700 it seems pretty reasonable to me.
If it is anything like the new 24mm and 17mm TSE lenses, then RRP could be what it will cost. :bang:
That seems very expensive for what it is.
You can get perfect good macro lenses for £50. OK they are not AF or IS, but something like a Tamron or Tokina 90mm f/2.5 are superb, and really a lot of folks do MF for macro when AF (and certainly not IS!) isn't needed.
A bit of pespective is needed - when something at £700 (RRP £1000!) is seen as "reasonable", I think the plot has been lost a bit.
You don't need to spend anywhere close to £700 to do macro.
I'm surprised with the amount you've obviously spent in kit over your time on this forum that you are such a strong preponent of the £50 macro solution.
I've no doubt there are some great lenses around and love the fact that, with the Nikon system, you can use old MF lenses on modern bodies. Being a Canon-ite, I can't take you up on your offer unfortunately.
My point being - a lot of macro (the majority?) is done with manual focus - and ideally on a tripod, so a this is one of those areas where I feel quite strongly that bells and whistles are definately not required for good results. And not when it comes at such a premium.
and how the hell am I going to get another £1k past my OH this year