WDWFigment
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Mar 8, 2007
- Messages
- 2,245
Fisheyes... Nikon... crop sensor... options...
1. Nikon 10.5 F2.8 - relatively fast, full fisheye (though not as wide as some others)
2. Sigma 10mm F2.8 - probably comparable. Surprisingly large - I'm not sure how big the Nikon is, but when we put Code's rented Sigma against my Pentax 10-17mm, the Sigma was much, much larger.
3. Tokina 10-17mm - well, I know all about the optics on that one.The zoom is very handy but I do miss the speed of the F2.8.
4. Zenitar 16mm F2.8... really nice lens, well-loved by most owners, but of course not full fish on an APS. Still very wide, though - remember than 16mm in a fisheye will give you a much wider shot than 16mm on a rectilinear lens. This is, of course, my go-to lens for fisheye on my FF Pentax cameras. (You know - the kind where you open up the back and put this little cylinder in one end and thread it into a spindle on the other side... I've actually been carrying around one of my K1000s a lot the past week or two.) There are probably many other full-frame-compatible fisheyes you could also consider if going down that road, including the Sigma 15mm.
5. Samyang/Rokinon/Bower/Vivitar Series 1 (theirs is marked as 7mm) F3.5... a little slower but by most accounts, a very capable fisheye. I'm very curious about this one myself... not quite enough to buy another fisheye... but if it was an F2.8, I would seriously consider it!
6. Peleng 8mm F3.5 circular fisheye - this gives a fully round image on a full-frame and has vignetting in the corners on a crop sensor. It's a nutty one.
7. Lensbaby Composer with 12mm fisheye optic. This is a really odd duck - I will probably have to try it out one of these days.You get circular fisheye on full-frame, or nearly - presumably it moves around depending on how you adjust the Lensbaby itself.
There may be others but that's what I can think of all the top of my head.
Does your camera have the ability to do stop-down metering? If so, the lack of metering isn't such a huge deal - the only time I recall it being an annoyance for me (my Zenitar requires stop-down metering) was when shooting on Splash Mt and trying to quickly meter at the top of the big drop!
Annnewjerz, no stop-down metering for you? If you have that, there's no need to guess and take test photos...
Thanks for the comparison. Despite never having touched any of the three, I initially ranked the Tokina lower than the Nikon and Sigma because it wasn't f2.8. However, I also thought the range wouldn't be that beneficial. Can you speak to that at all? As of right now, my rankings are T1. Nikon, T1. Sigma, 3. Tokina. If there is a compelling justification for the 10-17 range, I may rank them all equally, then just buy whatever comes along cheapest first.