ac12
Been spending a lot of time on here!
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Not getting into professional photography but still feel something for it. Got a Nikon D3200 with basic 18-55 kit lens. Just wanted to know if its perfect for Landscape shots or if I need to upgrade the lenses. As I said, not into professional photography but just one of the hobbies. Being a traveler a great portfolio of photos is a plus.
Olivia
You need to be as specific as possible what you mean by landscape shots.
The reason is everyone here comes from their own point of view, which may or may not match what you mean.
In the general term, the 18-55 should be just fine. The 18-55 = 27-83mm FX/35mm film equivalent.
The primary lens on my 2nd 35mm film camera was a 43-86, and it did just fine for my 98+% of my vacation landscape photos. There were a few time when I wanted WIDER, and switched to a 24, but it was not often. And there were even fewer times when I wanted an even WIDER lens. One specific instance was shooting Morning Glory pool at Yellowstone. Even the 24 was not wide enough at that close distance.
But if you mean distant mountain peaks, then no the 18-55 is too short.
This is what I mean by you need to be as specific as possible what YOU mean by landscape.
There have been decades of photographers who only shot with a "normal" lens, which for you is a 35mm lens. And 35mm is about in the middle of your 18-55.
As others have said, as you shoot more, you will run into the "problems" that will make you think about different equipment, or ways to get around the problems. Examples
- If the lens is not wide enough, back up. If the subject is too small, move closer. This is what we did before zoom lenses, we zoomed with our feet.
- Obviously there are practical limits to this statement. You can't just take a few steps closer to a mountain, you have to drive MILES closer.
- If you want to take SLOW exposures of multiple seconds, then you need a tripod and remote shutter release.
- Buying a tripod is not a simple decision either.
- If you are shooting in dim light, rather than buy a faster lens, raise the ISO level.
- Raising the ISO level does come with a cost of less image quality, but not as much as some people say. It all depends on how picky your eye is.