My question is which lens should I use (and no I don't have any others to choose
from)? I know the 28-105 is supposedly a little sharper, but I *think* the
70-210 has less distortion in the 70-105 range (and it will be slightly
brighter/wide open). So I wonder which will be the more important factor given
the situation and potential for enlargements. Also, whichever lens I choose,
should I avoid using it at the extreme (i.e. 28-105 near 105 and 70-210 near
70). Please keep in mind that I will probably shoot wide open or close to it in
order to blur the background, so I'm sure that will have an impact on the
performance of the lens (or should I try another approach so I can stop down to
get the best quality out of the lens?).
Any advice is greatly appreciated.
Leen Koper ABIPP ARPS
Fotografie Leen Koper
www.fotografieleenkoper.nl
You didn't define "baby" but I'm assuming infant so you can probably ignore
what I'm about to say :-) I find when shooting young children (meaning under
6 but old enough to be mobile) that tripods just don't work. Them kids just
move too fast. If you only have one or two people to control them, and
they're in position to do so then the child will be looking at them and not
at the camera. If they're behind the camera to get the child to look in that
direction then there is nobody to catch him when he decides to bolt. So for
this application I usually use 35mm with either my 35-105 or 28-70 for rapid
framing and set up the lighting so that there is room for considerably
movement. I also try to get down to their eye level while shooting.
Jeffery S. Harrison
Thanks. That is helpful - the boy is about 1 year old, so not an infant, and at
least somewhat mobile.
The reason 85, 100, and 135mm are often cited as good focal lengths
for portraiture is because of the distance they make you stand back
from the subject. That distance provides you with a generally
pleasing perspective. If you come in closer, things start to look
distorted. Stand at a comfortable distance away from a mirror
and you look normal; walk in closer and your face starts to look,
well, odd. Same deal.
Babies are small. If you want to take full-body pictures of
them, 105mm would be long enough; if you want to take tighter shots,
105mm will not be long enough. Unless you're in a cramped room,
70mm should be wide enough even for an upper-body shot of a proud
parent holding the baby (an 85mm lens is often used for portraits
that include upper body and head, so 70 will work fine for that).
So I think the 28-105 is too short, while the 70-210 has
an appropriate range.
I'm wondering, though, why you specifically chose these two
lenses _and_ can only use one of them. If you have both, is
there any reason you can't take both? In the 70-105 range, you'd
need to figure out which one to use (guess: the 70-210, stopped
down to f/4 or f/4.5), but you could hedge your bets by doing
some shots with each lens. For anything that needs <70 or
>105, it's an easy choice :-)
--
Stephen M. Dunn <ste...@stevedunn.ca>
>>>----------------> http://www.stevedunn.ca/ <----------------<<<
------------------------------------------------------------------
Say hi to my cat -- http://www.stevedunn.ca/photos/toby/
Good question. I _am_ taking both lenses, but I doubt I'll need them both.
Plus, I don't want to be second-guessing my lens choice while I'm shooting -
being new at this type of photography I'm sure I'll have quite enough to
concentrate on already. I know I didn't state this clearly, but my question was
not really about what focal length to use, since I know that somewhere around 85
is best and most common for this type of work, but rather which lens will give
me the best results in that range. In my head I was thinking "slightly sharper
lens" or "slightly wider aperture" - should have just said it that way.
You raise a good point, though, that >105 is likely to be more useful than <70,
particularly to get in tighter - this is probably more significant than the
other factors. And since it's outdoors I don't expect to have a space problem
that requires a shorter length. Unless someone else posts a really convincing
argument for the 28-105 before I go to bed tonight, I'll use the 70-210.
Thanks.
Exactly. The OP is stressing too much about equipment. Baby portraiture is
only 1% about equipment.
Young children are irreverent. They have no respect for photography. At 1
year old, they are busy, busy, BUSY. They are either crawling or walking or
learning to walk. They are constantly moving, often with their heads down
looking at whatever they are exploring. They may not like you (if you are a
stranger), may love you, or completely ignore you. You can try to be
involved (i.e., bring toys, make noises, be goofy, interact), or have the
parents interact, or just hang back and let the child do his own thing. The
distractions generally work only a limited number of times, though. They
are easily bored, distracted, tired.
It doesn't really matter what focal length you choose. Choose a FAST lens,
and forget about it. Concentrate on your rapport with the child. Focus
quickly, anticipate, and click. Those good portrait moments are fleeting,
at best.
Be prepared for drool, spit-up, or a child that lunges for your toy--err, I
mean camera--and wants to chomp it or get his smudgy hands on it. Be
prepared for frustration (your own). Taking pictures of young children
takes a LOT of patience. It's nothing like taking pictures of adults.
--
Jeannie
E-mail: moonflour at bigfoot dot see oh em
Web: http://www.talisweb.com/jeannie/
Michael
"doughnut" <please.reply...@dfn.de> wrote in message news:<ak33sm$1e715n$1...@ID-146901.news.dfncis.de>...
Great idea - if the more protrait type stuff isn't working too well this may
work instead. I have the the 20-35 USM that will also be in the bag, and I
guess I could also use the 28-105.
I agree, the equipment isn't a big factor, but I'm not stressing about
equipment too much at all or trying to figure out what focal length to use.
My obviously-not-so-well-phrased original question was really about the
choice between two lenses - _all_other_things_being_equal_ - including
approach, perspective, technique, yada yada yada. My plan was to shoot
somewhere in the 85 range, so I just wondered which of the two lenses would
be the better choice - on the technical lens performance level.
Michael
michael....@att.net (street shooter) wrote in message news:<2e0183f8.0208...@posting.google.com>...