|
User Lens Reviews Canon EF 28mm f1.8 USM review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful
A great wide angle lens for your Canon EOS Rebel, Thursday, 11 December 2008
Report this review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful
Good 50mm Equivalent Lens , Friday, 05 December 2008 When this lens first arrived, I tested it at night with most of my incandescent lights dimmed to 50%. I was very impressed with its speed; I could shoot perfectly-exposed photos at around 1/60 or 1/30. Since then, I have mostly shot photographs indoors with moderate to dim lighting, and I have rarely been let down by it's performance. During one of my vocal concerts, my dad was able to take some amazing shots of my group and I from the audience (the stage was illuminated and the house dark). When I tried this a week later at the same venue with my kit lens (I was sitting much further away, and thus needed a longer lens) I was unable to do so because the f/3.5 was not fast enough. When fully open, the bokeh is pleasing, allowing for sharp DOF contrasts between subject and background I will admit that I can see sharpness differences with this lens between wide open and stopped down (f/5.6 or so). The differences will vary in significance from photographer to photographer, but in my case, the sharpness decrease was a very small price to pay for being able to shoot flashless indoors at night with available lighting. I also noticed some minor chromatic aberrations when shooting outdoors at f/5.6 and below. Again, for my desired application, this was not a significant issue. I would like to note that so far, I have only viewed my images using two media: a calibrated computer LCD and my Epson 280 printer (using premium borderless 4x6 photopaper). Overall, I really enjoy using this lens. For me, speed is a very important factor and this lens delivers. I have been shooting with it for 3 months now, and I have only detached it once (when I failed at capturing some pictures at the performance venue mentioned earlier). I would recommend this lens for photographers who anticipate a lot of low-light situations where they want a natural field of view (on a 1.6x crop body). I find it to be a great lens for taking pictures of people doing fun things indoors.
Report this review
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Good prime for daily/indoor use, Wednesday, 03 September 2008 Pros: - Fast at f/1.8 although soft - Reasonably sharp from f/2.0, gets better from f/2.2 - Rugged - Good 'normal' lens for APS-C sensor with 1.6 multiplier (mine is the 450d) Cons: - Very soft at f/1.8 - My copy has a front-focus problem at times Overall, happy with the lens since I can take available light pictures indoors where my 50mm f/1.4 prime (must have!) is too narrow. I can see the front-focus issue on some shots when compared to my 24-105mm f/4L in a reasonably contolled test. Also, from shot to shot taken indoors, the focus is slightly off at times. On a second test indoors, the focus was spot on.
Report this review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful
28mm, Wednesday, 28 May 2008 the 28 on a full frame sensor is amazing. it works great, i love it.
Report this review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Another marvelous Canon prime lens, Tuesday, 22 April 2008 As this lens will not get used a whole lot I immediately eliminated the 'L' lenses as too costly for the return. I was looking for something in the 20-30mm range. It needed to be a USM as non-USM lenses make too much noise while focusing and this lens will be used at plays & concerts. (I have the 35mm f/2 and it is way too noisy to use at these events.) To make a long story short I selected the 28mm f/1.8 USM. This lens approaches the 'standard' 50mm lens length that shoots pretty much what you see with your eye. It excells in dimly lit interiors, such as auditoriums, for instance. Use it wide open with confidence, but focus carefully - DOF is narrow even with a 28 at 1.8. Pros: Lightweight, Consistent Output, Strong Construction, Rugged, Easily Interchangeable, Durable, Sharp Focus, Wide Aperture Cons: my only complaint is the same as with all non L lenses, that I have to pay extra for the hood. Canon EF 28mm f/1.8 USM Wide Angle Lens for Canon SLR Cameras
Report this review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful
Not all that impressed..., Sunday, 20 April 2008 In my opinion, the value just isn't there. I mean if your paying double the price of the 28 2.8, you'd think it would keep sharp focus at the 1.8 setting, but it didn't. I'm just gonna buy the 2.8(which ive rented in the past, and loved) and be happy with my purchase. Needless to say I returned the lens a couple days later
Report this review
1 of 1 people found the following review helpful
Good Lens, Sunday, 06 April 2008
Report this review
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful
The No-Flash Answer To Everything, Friday, 08 February 2008 I'm a fan of shooting candid shots, mostly indoors, and flash is just NOT an option if you really want great pics that don't interfere with (or annoy) your subjects. I came to this lens because the EF50mm f/1.8 was just a bit *too* tight/long for candid pics without stepping back all the time, or settling for face shots only. This 28mm approaches the 'standard' 50mm lens length that shoots pretty much what you see with your eye. I thought the lens was a bit soft at first, but over time, I've gotten to know it inside and out, and my photos are close to tack-sharp most of the time - even though I rarely shoot above f/2.5 with this. I'll take shooting with this at f/1.8 or f/2.0 over a lens with image stabilization any time. And of course, being a prime (non-zoom) lens means that your pictures are going to be sharper than a zoom lens with IS anyways. This is a lens that will spoil you forever. You'll be able to capture photos in virtually any lighting conditions. I love shooting with it, and ISO 1600 shots at f/2.0 are just spectacular - exactly what I need for shooting in *extremely* low light. With a bit of post-processing, I'm making incredible photos that were simply not possible in the days before digital. Build quality is excellent, and the USM auto-focus does a great job in bright-light and low-light situations with ease, silently. If you want sharp low-light photos in a compact and lightweight lens, this is your saviour.
Report this review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful
Defective right out of the box!!!, Thursday, 27 December 2007 Needless to say that I wanted that lens for a New Year's present and had paid for Next Day shipping.
Report this review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful
Great Lens!, Wednesday, 31 October 2007 Cons: None that I found so far.
Report this review
2 of 2 people found the following review helpful
Fast lens for 1.6x SLR cameras, Monday, 23 July 2007
Report this review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful
Good normal lens for APS sensor Canon digital SLRs, Tuesday, 17 April 2007
Report this review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful
My new favorite lens., Thursday, 22 March 2007 Yes, it has a very narrow depth of field at f/1.8. But that's the idea sometimes. Backgrounds are totally obfuscated one foot past the focus point. It gets deeper and sharper the more you stop it down. If you've been looking for an EF AF lens that will shoot in awful, low-light conditions, this is a great one. Neither my EFS18-55 nor my EF35-80 can come anywhere near the low-light performance! I'm using a Digital Rebel/300D, and I was able to manually focus perfectly in very dim light. The USM AF works great, but you have to choose your focus point very carefully at f/1.8. I'm a fisheye-guy, so the pictures are a little un-artistic for my "Artwork" but for portraits, landscapes, architecture, even drunken snapshots (I'm assuming) it's tack-sharp every time! If you hate the curved lines from shperical wide-angles, this lens will tickle you pink!! I'm going to take some pictures at night, I'm hoping for cloud definition in near-total darkness. I will post them with the other customer images. (Even if they're bad, I want to test the LIMITS of this very fast/bright lens!) Find a good used one if you can, but it would have been worth an extra $100 if a used one wasn't available. Every time I buy a more expensive Canon lens, I wonder if I'm finally going to get something that's not quite worth the high price; but it hasn't happened yet!! My next purchase will be:Canon EF 16-35mm f/2.8L II USM Ultra Wide Angle Zoom Lens My wife will kill me when she sees that pricetag! Stay Tuned!
Report this review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful
Responce to Nov 23 review, Monday, 27 November 2006
Report this review
0 of 0 people found the following review helpful
Get a 50 mm f/1.4 instead (and stand back further!, Thursday, 23 November 2006
Report this review
Results 1 - 15 of 18
|
Most Popular...
|


