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Originally Posted by HydroFuel
(Post 4083407)
I am getting 18-105 with Nikon D5500 instead of 18-140. . |
Originally Posted by Aroy
(Post 4079526)
From what I have read on photography forums, Yongnuo is the way to go, as every one abroad is switching to this brand. |
Originally Posted by naveenroy
(Post 4080761)
I have also been looking for a good wide angle lens - any pointers? |
Originally Posted by sdp1975
(Post 4084107)
I've been planning to purchase to buy a wide angled lens for my Canon APS-C and from the reviews it looks like the Canon 10-18 is the best budget buy. Check out the reviews on the web. |
Originally Posted by sgiitk
(Post 4084313)
During a recent trip to Bhutan I found a large fraction of users having an 18-130/140 mm as their standard on both Nikon & Canon. My son has the more common 18-55 and 55-200 and is planning to switch to an 18-140 on his Nikon. |
Originally Posted by sdp1975
(Post 4084107)
I've been planning to purchase to buy a wide angled lens for my Canon APS-C and from the reviews it looks like the Canon 10-18 is the best budget buy. Check out the reviews on the web. |
Originally Posted by sdp1975
(Post 4084107)
I've been planning to purchase to buy a wide angled lens for my Canon APS-C and from the reviews it looks like the Canon 10-18 is the best budget buy. Check out the reviews on the web. |
Originally Posted by racingmachine
(Post 4085905)
Newb question- What is the best Point & Shoot camera one can buy to learn the ropes of photography? Something which should not hurt too much financially if one does not wish to pursue it further? Thanks. :) |
Originally Posted by racingmachine
(Post 4085905)
Newb question- What is the best Point & Shoot camera one can buy to learn the ropes of photography? Something which should not hurt too much financially if one does not wish to pursue it further? |
Originally Posted by racingmachine
(Post 4085905)
Newb question- What is the best Point & Shoot camera one can buy to learn the ropes of photography? Something which should not hurt too much financially if one does not wish to pursue it further? |
Originally Posted by sgiitk
(Post 4086043)
I will say go for a good rangefinder with a zoom lens. The basic will be say 5MP and a decent zoom, say 5x or more. Why only 5MP since an A4 print only requires about 3MP. So even after cropping you have enough juice left. Look at any of the better reputed marques like Canon, Nikon, Olympus, etc. I somehow never considered Sony to be in the same category, but many will disagree with me. |
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