I am new to photography and want to take a next step inside. I am currently interested in the Canon Elan 7 body with a 28-105mm lens. My question is, since I am on a tight budget, I am considering between 2 types. The f/4-5.6 and the f/3.5-4.5 models. How much difference is there really to this technical detail? Since they are around 100$ apart I would like to know if it is worth the "investment".
Also, if you folks here have another suggestion to propose me, maybe another camera brand & model, I would be glad to hear about it.
Thank-you.
I still want the Elan 7 body. The 50mm lens is a good option, thanks for suggesting it. I currently have a Pentax K-1000 with a 50mm lens. Does a pretty good job.
If you have any other suggestions please tell me.
Thanks again.
You might want to take a look at Sigma lenses, I'm using two Sigma
zooms (28-135mm and a 15-30mm) on a Rebel and on a 10D. The
quality is as good as the Canon consumer lenses and the prices are
decent. The wide zoom has a noisy AF motor though.
If you want a Canon lens, go for USM - focussing is quiet and quick.
Either way, make a trip to your local camera store and try different
lenses on your camera to see if you like the handling/weight/speed
noise.
Top of the line (quality and price) is always Canon L glass...
I do not have the budget to buy the flash I want at the moment. Will the built in flash do the job...?
Thanks.
Thanks again.
I also use a canon and really want a 550 EX but can't find room in the budget. I have a couple of Braun flashes that do the job for now though. I got one for free at a garage sale and purchased another at a camera swap meet.
Let's say you take a picture of a nickel. If you take the picture at 1:2, then it is half the size of an actual nickel on the negative itself. If you take it at 1:1, it will be roughly life size compared to an actual nickel....once again, that's the size on the negative itself. So you can imagine blowing that up to a 4x5 or even an 8x10. You'll be able to see some detail in that little coin.
Also, I have been recommended to buy the BP-300 battery pack to go along with the camera. How useful is it? Does it make life easier with this camera?
Thanks again,
Lior
I recently bought the 28-105 3.5-4.5 lens and can tell you it is a great lens! :lol: If budget is a problem you might want to try one of the rebel series cameras, spend as much as you can afford on the lens, it is far more important than the actual body. You could try ebay, film cameras are going for next to nothing, of course, there are always some risk, so it's up to you.
good luck!
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March 03, 2010

