Recommended Canon and Nikon DSLR LensesBest Photography Lenses for Portraits, Weddings, Landscape, Travel
The focal length and aperture of a lens will determine its suitability for a job. Here's how to choose the best Canon and Nikon lenses for different situations.
A camera lens needs to have the right
This article assumes that Nikon 1.5x crop DX cameras and Canon 1.6x crop EF-S cameras will be used. Full frame (Nikon FX, Canon EF) DSLRs are not considered. Why Lens Aperture MattersThe lens aperture affects lens brightness. A bright lens means that faster shutter speeds can be used, freezing movement and reducing blur. The larger the "f number", the darker the lens. The list below shows decreasing aperture in steps of one "stop". Each aperture is half the brightness of the aperture above it, double the brightness of the aperture below it.
Why Lens Sharpness Doesn't MatterMost Canon and Nikon lenses are more than sharp enough. Even their entry-level kit lenses are sharp. Photography magazines and websites obsess over lens resolution but a photograph is more likely to be blur due to photographer error than to lens quality. Lenses for Portrait PhotographyA 50mm f1.8 or f1.4 makes a great portrait lens. The large aperture is used to throw the background out of focus, drawing attention to the person in the photograph. 50mm allows a comfortable working distance between the photographer and the subject, not too near and not too far. A zoom lens is not required because portraits are posed, so the photographer has time to move closer or further away. Lenses for Landscape PhotographyA wide range of focal lengths are used for landscape photography. A wide angle lens is good but longer focal lengths are useful for zooming in to distant mountains and other interesting details of the landscape. Lens weight is important if walking around for miles in the countryside. Heavy large aperture lenses are not required as there are no fast moving objects to photograph. The answer? The cheap kit lenses. The Nikon and Canon 18-55mm f3.5-5.6 kit lenses are light, and are wide enough for general landscape photography. For more reach, the 55-200mm lenses are also cheap and light:
Wide angle lenses are useful, but heavy and expensive, only required if the 18-55mm zoom isn't wide enough:
Lenses for Sports PhotographySports photography needs long focal lengths to get close to the action, and large apertures for high shutter speeds to freeze movement. Professional photographers use the Canon and Nikon 70-200mm f2.8 lenses as the bare minimum for sports photography. Longer lenses are used by full-time sports photographers. These are the huge lenses seen at sporting events. They can cost tens of thousands of dollars. Casual photographers can use the 55-200mm lenses mentioned above. Their f5.6 aperture is bright enough in sunlight but a bit too dark for indoors. The Canon and Nikon 75-300mm f4-5.6 lenses will add some reach, but not as much as might be expected. Lenses for Travel PhotographySightseeing means walking around all day. Travel photography lenses need to be light. They also should be cheap, in case the camera is stolen. The 18-55mm kit lenses are ideal. The Canon and Nikon 18-200mm f3.5-5.6 super zooms are more versatile but also heavy and expensive. One alternative is to use a large aperture 35mm lens. There is no zoom but the brighter lens is useful for handheld shots of building interiors (museums, art galleries), where flash is not allowed or is impractical.
Lenses for Wedding PhotographyThe 18-200mm super zooms are popular for weddings. One lens can do it all, no photo opportunities are lost because of time wasted changing lenses: wide angle views of friends and family, close ups of emotional parents, the bride's and groom's hands during the exchange-of-rings ceremony. The small f5.6 aperture isn't a problem as flash can be used. A 50mm lens will also be useful for the many portrait photographs taken at weddings. Lenses for Wildlife PhotographyWildlife photography is like sports photography, only longer focal lengths are needed and large apertures are less important. Few casual photographers are willing to pay for these lenses, and haul them for miles through the wilderness. Beginner photographers can get their feet wet with the 75-300mm f4-5.6 zooms. 1.4x and 2x teleconverters can be used to increase the focal length, at the cost of a smaller aperture and loss of some image quality. Alternatively, the photographer can crop the photograph to zoom in. Some resolution is lost but the results can be good enough. Party LensesThe 18-55mm kit lenses are well suited to the confined spaces of indoor parties, especially if flash is used. The 35mm lenses mentioned earlier work well if flash is not desired. The Best LensWhile some guidelines and recommendations can be made, the right lens depends a lot on a photographer's style, his way of seeing the world. Only experience can help to shape this.
The copyright of the article Recommended Canon and Nikon DSLR Lenses in Photography is owned by Yuen Kit Mun. Permission to republish Recommended Canon and Nikon DSLR Lenses in print or online must be granted by the author in writing.
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