She currently has two lenses... One is 75-300mm and the other is 18 - 55mm.
She is a first year photography student and we were just thinking of getting her a lens for Christmas. She hasn't asked for one and we don't really don't want to question her. We want to surprise her.
I went on line and there are so many lenses to look at. I'm really not sure which would be a good option for her.
Thanks in advance,
Janna
ps we live in Canada so don't have all the stores that are in the US
Most good lenses need to be bought in specialty stores or online.
If I were you, I'd ask her what type of lens she wants. As a photography student, she might really prefer a high quality prime lens, or an upgraded kit lens. Yes, she already has an 18-55 --- But for example, she might want the vastly superior 17-55/2.8. They may sound the same, but they aren't at all.
She may get great benefit from a 50mm 1.4 prime.
Or maybe you are going down the right alley, and she would love an ultra-wide.
I will say I own about 10 lenses, and the ultrawide was one of the last I added to my collection. It's a fun lens for landscapes, and I've gotten some great shots with it. (I use the Tamron 10-24, affordable with a good range. But the Tokina 11-16 is a better lens overall). That said, my upgraded kit lens and my primes are more important and more useful to me than an ultrawide.
My progression... and the progression for many enthusiast photographers, often goes something like this:
1. Kit 18-55 lens.
2. Realize you sometimes want more reach, add Telephoto zoom.... 55-250, 70-200, 70-300, etc.
3. Want something for low light, and want to play with narrow depth of field, add Prime lens, often a 50 1.8.
4. Realize that the kit lens doesn't give you the quality of your 50/1.8 prime, so add Upgraded kit lens and/or more prime lenses.
5. Your interests start to get refined... You consider "specialty lenses" like a true 1:1 macro lens (if you want to try photographing closeups of bugs and flowers), or an ultrawide (for massive landscapes and some other uses), or a fisheye (for a unique perspective), or upgraded telephoto zooms (you love the reach of your telephoto zoom, but wish it was the quality of your upgraded kit lens!)