- Joined
- Jan 16, 2006
- Messages
- 5,903
One word (OK, one phrase): "automatic horizon correction" - a totally free benefit of having a stabilized image sensor.That does not surprise me at all. I would take a good fast lens over vr any day.
Cue In-Body IS camera users comments on my mark...3....2....1....![]()


Code - you mentioned Canon's F1.4 cost. To be fair, they do have the 50mm F1.4 which is well under a grand (but still a little pricey!)
Jann, I can't believe the Canon SR said that. I would have been pretty insulted. I don't believe that stat for a second.
Fact is, the quality third party lenses are often better that the OEM stuff, or offer options not available from the OEM. When they're not better, they're usually competitive and far cheaper. Let's say you want a 17-50 or so zoom for your DSLR... Tamron or Sigma will sell you a quite good one for, oh, $400 or so. Nikon wants $1,200, and that's without VR! Want a 24/28-75mm? Tamron's well-regarded 28-75mm usually goes for $350 or less last I checked, Nikon's 24-75 (still with no VR) is about $1,700. If you need 24-75, Sigma will sell you one for $600.
And that's for the most common type of advanced zoom lens there is. Once you get into oddball stuff... well, Canon doesn't even make a fisheye for their APS-sensor DSLRs. (I don't think they have any APS-sensor primes, do they? Nikon has brought out one or two that I can think of.) Nobody makes anything like a Lensbaby. The primes lenses in general from the "big two" are mostly decades-old designs, while Sigma has been slowly releasing brand-new modern prime lenses (including a fisheye.) All of the OEMs have at least a few lenses that are not as good as they should be and the third-parties often beat those. This is certainly true with macro lenses; third-party macros often are extremely nice. The best SLR macro yet made as far as I know is the recent Voigtlander 125mm F2.5. Third-party 105mm macros have beaten all the OEM 100-105mm macros. Tamron's 90mm is still very well respected in its various iterations. Companies like Voigtlander, Zeiss, Hartblei, and others are continuing to make ultra-high-quality third-party glass. Of course, those are, with very few exceptions, all manual-focus lenses.
And those are just the modern ones. If you do your research, you can find some very nice older manual-focus lenses with pedestrian brand names like Vivitar (especially the Komine-built ones and some of the Kiron ones). Speaking of cheap names, if you hunt around, you can find a brand-new well-received-and-quite-cheap manual-focus Samyang 85mm F1.4. There's a ton of interesting lenses out there, once you get out of the OEM catalogs.
To say nothing of using adapters... some people spend a lot of money on adapters or conversions to use Leica lenses on their DSLRs (I think you can adapt/convert them to any of the big 5 DSLR systems except for Sony.) Many use adapters to use a superior lens of a certain type with their body of choice.
As for the lenses being designed for the particular camera... remember that most of the lenses out there for all the systems are older designs that were built for film cameras, they had no idea they'd be used on digital cameras when they were designed.
