JIP
No longer a newbie, moving up!
+1
back on subject however I would??? recommend these lenses for wedding (I prefer the canon's on a professional level however nikons glass is good too)
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I hope you meant to say not rcommend right??
+1
back on subject however I would??? recommend these lenses for wedding (I prefer the canon's on a professional level however nikons glass is good too)
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...70-200 VR 2.8 for those candid photojournalistic style shots
28-70 2.8 great all around lens
85mm 1.4 good for low light situations
no, I would recommend those for a nikon body, both are good lenses but I prefer canons because their autofocus in general is faster, and I like their 70-200 L IS better than nikons, from what i've read the canon trumps it in image quality, and is an inch shorter. I however have not used the nikon 70-200.
Bravo!!!The current pro Nikkor AF-S line of autofocus glass is every bit as fast to focus as the white lens guys. And yes, Nikkor pro glass is sharp, tack sharp. But this slooooow lens (Slow as in aperture, not focus acquisition. Even though it is much slower than the pro AF versions) is NOT suited for weddings. There is a reason wedding photography is expensive. Pro equipment is expensive. But pro's expect to get super sharp, high contrast and true color in poor lighting conditions. I had a guy tell me he was going to start shooting weddings with a D40 and the kit lens. Good Luck, the most skilled wedding photographer is severely handicapped with this class of equipment. A few years ago good wedding photographer would show up with a kit including 3 Hassy bodies, three fast lenses, a wide, normal, and portrait tele. Each rig typicaly had a Lunidyne flash, 2 external Lumidyne battery packs and a few film backs. He/she might also bring studio strobes, tripod and a makeup artist. Equipment wise, about 35K easily could be spent to start. The typical couple spending the same 2-3.5K expect the same quality from that D40 shooter as from the Blad shooter.
This was your question if you may want to upgrade and I think the answer is a resounding yes. I think you should have made your most recent post your first it would have been very helpful to get this kind of detail up front. In your case to start out you may just be assisting you may never shoot for a while. Another thing that is possible is your friend might let you use some of his gear to start with. All the detail is important in a post. So to answer your question "do you need to upgrade" I say absolutely if you laready have a D40 great save up for a D200 as a primary body and use the D40 as a backup. When you mention the 18-200 as a "good lens" this may be the case to some but if you are buying gear for wedding photography it is not. Save up for 2.8 lenses and learn as much as you can from your friend.Well, I was wandering if this lense would make a good wedding/ portrait lens. If anyone has used it or heard anything about it, I would love to hear what you have to say. Also, I have the D40 and now that I am learning more I am wandering if I may want to upgrade to say a D80 or D200? I will first be getting a good lens like the one in question but for shooting weddings and portraits I was wandering if I would be better off getting a D80 body to go with the new lens and use the D40 as a backup? Any thoughts on this would be greatly appreciated![]()
When you mention the 18-200 as a "good lens" this may be the case to some but if you are buying gear for wedding photography it is not. Save up for 2.8 lenses and learn as much as you can from your friend.
so i have the AF-S DX 18-135 f/3.5-5.6. I asumme this means I can only set the aperature on my D80 of a range from 3.5-5.6. Correct?
However the manual for the lens says "Aperature range f/3.5-f/22 (at 18MM) and f/5.6-f38 (at 135mm) I'm confused
Hey, I am not trying to say I got the D40 so I could go pro. I bought it as an upgrade from a point and shoot camera (Fujifilm S5100) for everyday shooting. Onece I started learning about photography and I joined this forum I started getting more and more interested in maybe doing photography work on the side. I was shooting at a concert last Friday for practice and yesterday while I was in the store a guy came up to me who had recognized me from the concert and we started talking. Turns out he is a wedding photographer and once we got on that subject the conversation just ran away on a photography path. He asked if I would like to come and help/learn how Weddings are done and that is were I am at. If I do decide to do it on the side I will most deffinently be getting a D200 and a much better lens. When I got the D40 I thought it was just for my love of taking pictures, I wasnt thing of going pro or els I would have saved for the D200. If the photographer lets me I will use my D40 just to help and get into it while saveing for the D200 then I will, but I will not be using the D40 as my main camera if things work out![]()
It just sounds like some of you are not happy with me for owning a D40 and talking about weddings so I wanted to clear some things upI love the info by the way, Thanks!