Digital camera lens buying guide

Published Dec 4, 2012 | By Andy Westlake
32

Updated September 2013

What lens should I buy for my digital camera?

Once you've bought a new interchangeable lens camera - either a digital SLR or one of the new breed of interchangeable lens compacts typified by Micro Four Thirds - you'll inevitably start thinking of adding an extra lens or two to your arsenal. This is the first step to realizing the flexibility of a system camera, but with the bewildering variety of options available on the market, you could be forgiven for wondering just why you left behind the relative simplicity of a compact camera.

In this guide we'll lead you step-by-step through the process of understanding the different kinds of lenses, and choosing the right one for your needs.

How are lenses named?

Looking at the lens pages on manufacturers' websites can be a little intimidating for a new user. Lens names often include long lists of letters and numbers, which certainly sound impressive but can also be thoroughly confusing to the newcomer. Luckily you can safely ignore most of them to start off with, and concentrate mainly on just a few things:

  • Focal length - defines the lens's angle of view
  • Aperture - describes how much light the lens gathers
  • Image Stabilization - some lenses include optical stabilization units to counteract the blurring effects of hand shake
  • Format - describes the sensor size the lens is designed to work with.
  • Lens mount - determines whether the lens will physically fit your camera

We'll look into each of these in more detail below.

Focal Length

The first number used to describe a lens is its focal length; in combination with the camera's sensor size, this defines the angle of view covered by the lens, with smaller numbers indicating a wider angle. Zoom lenses are named using two numbers which indicate the extremes of the range, for example 18-55mm for a typical kit zoom lens. Fixed focal length lenses which don't zoom (also widely known as 'primes') just have a single number (e.g. 50mm).

Here, we can see this lens' key specifications expressed in terms of its focal length span ('zoom range) which is 18-35mm, and its minimum aperture range, which is F3.5 at 18mm, and F4.5 at 35mm.

Other information here is specific to the manufacturer. 'AF-S', describes the type of autofocus motor, 'ED' means Nikon has used Extra Low Dispersion glass in the lens design, and 'G' denotes automatic aperture selection (rather than mechanical in earlier lenses). 

The image below shows how the field of view varies with focal length on a camera with the most common sensor size, APS-C (as used by Canon, Nikon, Pentax and Sony). The conversion table shows how these relate to two other standard sensor sizes, namely 'full-frame' which is the same size as a 35mm film negative, and Four Thirds which is used by Olympus and Panasonic (see our DSLR Buying Guide for more information about sensor sizes).

For the sake of convenient comparison, lenses are often referred to by their '35mm equivalent' focal length, for example a 18-55mm kit lens may be described as a 28-90mm equivalent. It's important to understand that this means simply that an 18-55mm lens on APS-C covers the same angle of view as a 28-90mm does on a 35mm camera, not that the focal length of a lens changes on different formats.

 Lens type 
35mm 'full-frame'
  APS-C / DX Four Thirds
 Ultra wide angle  24mm and wider  16mm and wider  12mm and wider
 Wide angle  28mm  18mm  14mm
 Standard (Normal)  50mm  30mm  25mm
 Telephoto  80mm and longer  55mm and longer  42mm and longer

 Aperture

The aperture of a lens is the second major parameter used in its specification, and describes how much light it is capable of gathering (see our glossary for more detail). Apertures can be expressed in several different ways, with F4, f/4, 1:4 all meaning the same thing. A smaller number means the lens has a larger maximum aperture and therefore gathers more light; an F2.8 lens collects twice as much light as an F4, for example.

A lens with a larger maximum aperture allows you to shoot in lower light, and (for example) take pictures indoors without using flash. Larger apertures also give decreased depth of field (i.e. how much of the picture in front of and behind the focus point appears sharp), which is an important aspect of creative photography.

A large aperture such as F2.8 gives a shallow depth of field, allowing the isolation of one element in a picture Large aperture lenses also allow you to shoot indoors without having to resort to flash

Image Stabilization

Image stabilization has become widespread across camera systems over the past few years, but the various manufacturers implement it in different ways. Pentax and Olympus incorporate it into the camera body, whereas Canon, Fujifilm, Nikon, Panasonic and Samsung use systems built into the lens. Sony (slightly confusingly) uses in-body 'Super Steady Shot' for its Alpha SLT cameras, but in-lens 'Optical Steady Shot' for its Nex system cameras. Image stabilization is especially useful with telephoto lenses, so is worth bearing in mind when comparing the available options.

Image stabilization systems reduce the blur caused by camera shake, allowing sharp pictures to be taken even in low light or at long focal lengths.

If you own a camera that doesn't have stabilization built into the body, you'll probably want to consider buying stabilized lenses, especially telephotos.

The various manufacturers all call lens-based optical image stabilization by different names, with corresponding initials in the lens names, so here's what you need to look out for when buying:

  • Canon - Image Stabilization (IS)
  • Fujifilm, Panasonic and Samsung - Optical Image Stabilization (OIS)
  • Nikon - Vibration Reduction (VR)
  • Sony (NEX system) - Optical Steady Shot (OSS)
  • Sigma - Optical Stabilization (OS)
  • Tamron - Vibration Control (VC)

Format Coverage

Most affordable SLRs and mirrorless cameras use APS-C sensors, which are approximately 24mm x 16mm in size, or less than half the size of the old 35mm film negative (Nikon calls these cameras 'DX format'). However high end Canon, Nikon and Sony cameras sport so-called 'full frame' sensors, which means purely that they are about the same size as a 35mm negative, i.e. 24mm x 36mm (Canon's older high speed professional cameras used an intermediate sensor size, called APS-H, which provided a 1.3X crop). Panasonic and Olympus, meanwhile, use the slightly smaller Four Thirds sensor format in their interchangeable lens cameras.

All of the major manufacturers (aside of course from Olympus and Panasonic) now make a range of lenses specifically optimized for APS-C cameras, and these generally provide the best choice for general-purpose and wide angle zooms in particular. Lenses designed for full frame will also work just fine on APS-C cameras. However APS-C lenses won't work properly on full-frame cameras, and in the case of Canon, it's physically impossible to attach an APS-C-optimised EF-S lens to a full-frame camera. This is something worth bearing in mind if you are thinking of upgrading to a full frame system in the near future.

The manufacturers label their APS-C format SLR lenses as follows:

  • Canon - EF-S
  • Nikon - DX
  • Pentax - DA
  • Sony - DT
  • Sigma - DC
  • Tamron - Di II
  • Tokina - DX

Sigma and Tamron also have specific designations for their lenses for mirrorless cameras - 'DN' and 'Di III' respectively. At the time of writing, Tokina doesn't make any lenses of this type.

Lens Mounts

Each camera maker uses its own proprietary lens mount, meaning that lenses can't be swapped across brands; a Canon lens won't fit on a Nikon body, for example, and you'll cause damage to lens and camera if you try. There are a couple of exceptions - Olympus and Panasonic both use the Four Thirds mount for DSLRs, and the Micro Four Thirds mount for their mirrorless interchangeable lens compacts (ILCs). Samsung's now-obsolescent SLRs were essentially re-badged Pentax KAF-mount models, however the company is now concentrating on its NX ILC series.

A number of third party manufacturers, most notably Sigma, Tamron and Tokina, also make lenses in a number of different mounts to fit the multiple camera brands. The table below lists the currently available lens mounts.

Manufacturer 
SLR 
ILC 
Notes 
 Canon EF,
EF-S
EF-M EF-S lenses are designed for APS-C DSLRs and cannot be used on cameras with larger sensors. However all EF lenses can be used on APS-C DSLRs.
All EF and EF-S lenses can also be used on the EOS M via Canon's own adapter, which maintains autofocus and image stabilization functions.
 Fujifilm F XF  Fujifilm's long-discontinued line of SLRs used the Nikon F mount. Its X-system mirrorless cameras use the entirely different XF mount.
 Nikon F 1 Nikon's entry-level DSLRs will not autofocus with many older lenses which don't have a built-in AF motor.
Nikon makes an adapter to fit F-mount lenses to its 1 System mirrorless cameras, but again only lenses with built-in motors will autofocus.  
 Olympus / Panasonic
Four Thirds
 
Micro Four Thirds Four Thirds SLR lenses can be fitted to Micro Four Thirds cameras via an adapter, but autofocus may not function well, if at all.
 Pentax KAF Q Some of Pentax's latest lenses with built-in autofocus motors will not autofocus on older DSLR bodies that lack the contacts to power the AF motor. 
 Samsung KAF NX Pentax K-mount DSLR lenses can be used on NX cameras via an adapter. 
 Sigma SA - Only Sigma makes lenses to fit its SA-series cameras
 Sony Alpha (A) E Alpha mount lenses can be used on NEX E-mount cameras via an adapter. Autofocus is dependent upon the lens type and the adapter used; with the original LA-EA1 adapter only lenses with built-in focus motors (SAM and SSD) will work, whereas all lenses will autofocus on the LA-EA2.

The new generation of interchangeable lens compacts all offer a degree of compatibility with the respective manufacturer's SLR mount via lens adapters, but in general performance is compromised to some extent - in particular autofocus is often slow and hesitant.

Zoom vs. Prime

Zoom lenses have become almost ubiquitous over the past few years, and at first sight buying a lens which is restricted to a single angle of view might seem pointless. But prime lenses still have some very real advantages; compared to zooms they tend to be smaller and lighter, have faster maximum apertures, and give sharper images. These factors make them extremely useful for specific purposes, for example low light shooting where a large maximum aperture is advantageous.

Fixed focal length 'prime' lenses are often much smaller and lighter than zooms covering the same angle of view. This is Pentax's 15mm F4 lens alongside a typical wideangle zoom, the Tokina 12-24mm F4 - the size advantage is obvious.

Some popular lens types

Standard Zoom

A standard zoom is a general-purpose lens that covers a range of focal lengths from wideangle to moderate telephoto. The most obvious example is the kit lens that comes with the camera (generally an 18-55mm F3.5-5.6 for APS-C), but this can be upgraded to something with slightly more range and better optical quality, or with a fast F2.8 maximum aperture.

Most manufacturers offer general-purpose upgrades to their kit lenses with expanded zoom ranges suitable for a wide range of subjects, such as this Sony 16-105mm.
Typical lenses: 16-85mm F3.5-5.6, 17-55mm F2.8

Telephoto Zoom

Often the second lens that photographers buy, the telephoto zoom effectively allows you to get closer to your subject, and is therefore useful for photographing such things as sports, wildlife, or children running around playing.

Telephoto zooms such as this Nikon 55-200mm allow you to zoom in on your subject.
Typical lenses: 55-200mm F4.5-5.6, 75-300mm F4-5.6.

Superzoom

Superzooms are all-in-one lenses which cover a full range of focal lengths from a moderate wideangle to long telephoto. They combine in one package the range of the kit zoom that came with the camera, plus that of a telephoto zoom, and therefore make perfect general purpose travel lenses. The technical image quality is often not quite as good as two separate lenses, but for many users this is more than made up for by the convenience.


Superzoom lenses such as the Tamron 18-270mm F3.5-6.3 encompass a wide range focal lengths from wideangle to telephoto.
Typical lenses: 18-200mm F3.5-5.6, 18-250mm F3.5-6.3

Wideangle Zoom

The wideangle zoom extends the angle of view out beyond that captured with the kit zoom, allowing you to capture broad sweeping vistas. It's therefore a popular choice for landscapes, architecture, and interior shots.

Wide zooms such as the Sigma 10-20mm F4-5.6 let you fit more in the frame.
Typical lenses: 10-24mm F3.5-5.6, 12-24mm F4

Macro Lens

'Macro' is used to describe a lens with extreme close-focusing ability, which allows you to take photographs of small objects such as insects or flowers. Some zoom lenses use 'macro' in their name to indicate closer-than-usual focusing ability, but true macro lenses tend to have fixed focal lengths. In general, the longer the focal length, the further away you can be from your subject. (Nikon calls these lenses 'Micro' instead.)

Macro lenses like the Olympus 50mm F2 allow you to shoot closeups in fine detail.
Typical lenses: 60mm F2.8 Macro, 100mm F2.8 Macro

Fast Prime Lens

Fast prime lenses come in all focal lengths, from wide angle to ultra-telephoto, but what they share in common is the ability to capture a lot of light in a relatively small, discreet package with high optical quality. Once an endangered species, this class of lens has seen a resurgence in recent years, and undoubtedly the most popular is the 50mm F1.8, or the more expensive 50mm F1.4. On a camera with an APS-C sensor this makes for a short telephoto perspective, ideal for snapping pictures of friends and family using natural light.

Fast prime lenses such as this Canon 50mm F1.8 allow you to shoot indoors in natural light without having to use flash.
Typical lenses: 50mm F1.8, 85mm F1.8

Pancake Lenses

The word 'pancake' is used to describe slimline lenses that are designed to make a camera as compact as possible. These have enjoyed a resurgence recently as a natural companion for Interchangeable Lens Compact cameras, but are also available for SLRs (most notably from Pentax and more recently Canon).

Three slimline 'pancake' lenses, from Olympus, Samsung and Pentax.

Other lens features

There are a few other aspects of build and operation which you may wish to consider when buying a lens.

Autofocus

The autofocus system used by a lens can have a large impact on its focusing performance, particularly in terms of noise and speed. The focus motor can be positioned either in the camera body or in the lens, and in-lens focus motors come in a variety of types with different characteristics. Here's an overview of the most important types:

  • Screw drive lenses don't have an internal motor, and instead are driven from the camera body via a mechanical coupling, which tends to be fast but comparatively noisy. Many older Nikon, Pentax and Sony lenses use this approach, although all three companies are now moving towards in-lens motors. Entry-level Nikon bodies don't have built-in motors, and so can't autofocus with this type of lens.

  • Micromotor drives use conventional DC motors to drive the focus group via a gear train. These tend to be found in cheaper lenses from the camera manufacturers and in many lenses from third party manufacturers (particularly Tamron and Tokina). AF performance is highly variable - at worst slow and noisy, at best reasonably fast and quiet.

  • Linear Stepper motors have become common in lenses designed for mirrorless cameras, as they can offer fast and silent autofocus during movie recording. Canon has also made a couple of SLR lenses using this technology.

  • Ultrasonic-type motors are very popular in SLR lenses, with the main attraction of being near-silent in operation. They come in two main flavors; the cheaper micro-type has similar characteristics to micromotors, while the more expensive ring-type has a number of advantages. In general, they are fast, silent, and enable full-time manual override of autofocus (see also below). Unfortunately not all of the manufacturers like to make the distinction between the two types clear in their marketing materials. 

As usual, each company has a different name for its ultrasonic motors, and uses the corresponding initials in the lens name.

  • Canon - Ultrasonic Motor (USM)
  • Nikon - Silent Wave Motor (AF-S)
  • Olympus - Supersonic Wave Drive (SWD)
  • Pentax - Supersonic Drive Motor (SDM)
  • Sigma - Hypersonic Motor (HSM)
  • Sony - Supersonic Wave Motor (SSM)
  • Tamron - Ultrasonic Silent Drive (USD) and Piezo Drive (PZD) - ring-tye and micro-type respectively
  • Tokina - Silent Drive Module (SD-M)

Electronic manual focus ('focus by wire')

Most SLR lenses have manual focus rings that move the focus group using a direct mechanical coupling. In contrast most mirrorless cameras employ a 'focus by wire' system, which uses the built-in motor for manual focusing. At its best this offers highly responsive, accurate manual focusing while keeping the lens size to a minimum.  

Manual Focus Override

On most cameras and lenses there is a switch to change between autofocus and manual focus, and turning the focus ring when in auto mode can potentially damage the motor or gearing. Some lenses, however, employ a clutch mechanism that allows the photographer to tweak focus manually at any time without risking damage. In general this is limited to the more expensive ultrasonic-type lenses, but Pentax deserves credit here, as almost all of its current range has this feature (which the company calls 'Quick Shift' manual focus).

Some Olympus lenses, like the 17mm F1.8 shown here, offer manual focus using a 'snap ring' manual focus system. Pulling the focus ring back (towards the camera) reveals a distance scale, engages manual focus mode and gives an impressively mechanical-feeling manual focus experience.

Most mirrorless camera systems also allow manual focus override, but rather than using a switch on the lens barrel, this is generally enabled by a menu setting on the camera.  

Manual Focus Lenses

A few companies still make high quality manual focus-only lenses, even in this era of autofocus. These tend to be fixed focal-length lenses with metal barrels and premium optics. The principal names to look out for here are Carl Zeiss and Voigtlander. Certain specialist optics from the major manufacturers are also manual focus only, including Canon and Nikon's tilt and shift lenses.

Build Quality and Weathersealing

As a general rule, the more expensive a lens is, the better built it is likely to be. The kit lenses that come with cameras tend to rather lightweight and plastic in construction; spend a bit more and you can get something more durable. Some lenses incorporate environmental sealed against dust and water; in general this tends to be towards the top end of the price spectrum, but Pentax and Olympus in particular offer a decent range of mid-priced sealed lenses (Pentax even makes weather resistant 'WR' versions of its kit lenses to go with its top-end K5 series DSLRs).

Special mention must also be made of Pentax's 'Limited' range of primes, which hark back to old fashioned manual focus lenses, with finely engineered and beautifully finished aluminium barrel construction.

System addict...

One last word. When choosing a camera system to invest in, it's important to appreciate that the lens has just as great an impact on the image quality as the camera. Lenses tend to last longer than cameras too, becoming obsolete less quickly than bodies, so it can be worth spending a little bit extra to get the quality or flexibility you really want. Most of the major players have broadly similar lens options (and there are plenty of third-party alternatives for those that don't), but inevitably each has its relative strengths and weaknesses.

If you have a specific application that needs specialized lenses (or other accessories) it's worth doing some research before committing to one system or another; dpreview's lens reviews and user forums are an excellent place to start. Oh, and once bitten by the lens buying bug, many enthusiasts find it hard to stop; you have been warned...

© 2010-2013, www.dpreview.com

The views and opinions expressed in this article are those of the author and do not necessarily reflect the views and opinions held by dpreview.com or any affiliated companies.

Comments

Total comments: 58
artbucks
By artbucks (1 week ago)

Not mentioned here, nor mentioned by manufacturers specs, is which of these zooms hold focus through the zoom range of the lens? Video and film lenses must hold focus for Video shooting. In my experience almost all of the still photo zooms shift focus when zooming, even some very high end lenses. Please apprise us of what lenses to look for that can hold focus while zooming. Especially in the wider zoom ranges like 10:1 which are needed for documentary video work or event videography. Thank you.

0 upvotes
WryCuda
By WryCuda (1 week ago)

You mention that the standard 18-55 kit lens is equivalent to 28-90mm. It's actually closer to the "old standard" 85mm.

0 upvotes
macmcl
By macmcl (1 week ago)

Andy, loved your dissertation on lenses. However, I'm left with a question: Will the whole image of a 35mm camera lens be captured by the smaller-than-35mm sensors used in most digital cameras? Specifically, will the whole image from my 24mm Pentax lens be captured on the sensor of a Pentax K20D SLR if I buy one?

macmcl

0 upvotes
Andy Westlake
By Andy Westlake (1 week ago)

The short answer is no - this is basis of the 'crop factor' of digital SLRs. If you put a full frame lens on a K20D the sensor can only 'see' part of the image, and the 1.5x crop factor means that the 24mm lens ends with an angle of view very similar to what you'll get from a 35mm lens on full frame.

You'll often see this expressed in terms of 'equivalent focal length' - in this case we'd say a 24mm lens on an APS-C camera offers an equivalent focal length of 36mm.

0 upvotes
gh13
By gh13 (2 months ago)

thanks andy -- told me what I really needed to know was that I needed a fast prime for those indoor shots.

0 upvotes
brucefp
By brucefp (3 months ago)

I would like to use video analysis in teaching people to play squash. The camera will be placed in a plexiglas box at the front of the court and must capture the full width of the court's rear wall without noticeable distortion. I tried using a Sony HI-8 camera with a 37mm lens. The image quality was OK but the camera doesn't quite capture the entire rear wall corner to corner. Distance from the front wall to the rear wall is 32 feet. The width of the rear wall is 21 feet. Can you suggest a modestly priced digital camcorder that would be good for this job?

Many thanks for any suggestions.

0 upvotes
Serban Alexandru
By Serban Alexandru (3 months ago)

And second, which focal length is closest to human eye perspective? I understand that not all focal lengths are born equal. What value (if any) do you give to this orientation criterion?

0 upvotes
Serban Alexandru
By Serban Alexandru (3 months ago)

OK. How about a few words on a typical package of lenses for the casual use of a non-professional? Is a 18-135 mm + 70-300 mm + 50 mm fixed a good example?
What about a 24-70 mm?
What lens for filming?
Because the range of focal lengths available makes it very hard to understand when and how are any of them needed. A bit more detail (such as you gave on the Canon 50 mm F 1.8) on the corresponding uses would help.
PS. Thank you for the article!

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 7 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
breich
By breich (4 months ago)

How does the difference in shake reduction technology between Panasonic and Olympus (lens vs body implementations) affect the interchangeability of their Micro 4/3 lens offerings?

Also, how can one use old Canon-mount SLR lenses on Canon DSLRs and what limitations are there when used in a manual mode? For instance, how does one control aperture manually on automatic-aperture analog lenses?

Thanks for this informative article.

0 upvotes
J reach
By J reach (4 months ago)

thanks, great article

0 upvotes
arunspike
By arunspike (4 months ago)

Hi, it would be great if someone assists me in buying this new lens. I own a Canon 600d(T3i) and would like to buy the following lens "Canon 0284B002 EF-S 60mm f/2.8 Macro USM Lens". The ebay URL is: http://www.ebay.com/itm/NEW-Canon-0284B002-EF-S-60mm-f-2-8-Macro-USM-Lens-EOS-20D-Digital-Rebel-XT-/370797303382?pt=Camera_Lenses&hash=item56553dd656#ht_1663wt_1066

I found this product in ebay and the description says that the compatible lens are EOS 20D, EOS Digital Rebel, EOS Digital Rebel XT. I would like to know whether would it suit for EOS 600D? Does 600d comes under EOS Digital Rebel series? Please advice.

Regards
Arun(India)

1 upvote
sonyfans
By sonyfans (5 months ago)

for macro lenses and fisheye lenses, I think Yasuhara is good choice.

I got one on this website. The company is good and free delivery to me by Fedex,like it very much. Share :www.amazon.com/shops/atmsupply

4 upvotes
vyasch
By vyasch (6 months ago)

Does it make any difference to use 18-200 lens directly instead of combining 50-200 with 18-55 lens?

0 upvotes
gustavditter
By gustavditter (6 months ago)

Original nikon lens are expensive , for the halv price i become very good cuality from Tamron 18-270 . Teles and zoom from Tamron, fast optic from Sigma , companies like Tamron use all the money in patents for telelens , Nikon use a lot of money in develop of new cameras . Therefore they are so expensive !

0 upvotes
Wes Odell
By Wes Odell (8 months ago)

Without having to search the database, what is a good "all purpose zoom" for one who travels and only wants to carry one lens?
thanks.
wes

0 upvotes
kherm
By kherm (7 months ago)

Hi! I just noticed your question and from my own experience I could recommend you Tamron 18-270 mm; I have had it already 3 years with my Nikon and without any complain. I know that there is a prejudice that 3rd party lenses are not so good, but I don´t have such experience. Still, I noticed that Nikon recently released a new zoom 18-300 and as I´m considering to replace my old camera I now considering this zoom, too. For a travel, lenses with such range are definitely the best and allow you to catch the moments that with other lenses would be missed. You can take a look to my album, all photos are taken with the same camera and lens: http://500px.com/kherm

1 upvote
carloschikiamco
By carloschikiamco (7 months ago)

I went to your website and saw your great pictures. But I noticed that much of the pictures were hardly above 100 mm. Maybe having a zoom lens up to -270 is too much. Something shorter would give lesser weight and cheaper I think. My wife is using a Nikon D60 with a 18-55 mm kit lens. I am thinking of buying her a new lens and am thinking of a sigma 18-250 mm macro lens or a Nikon 18-200 mm lens. What do you think?

0 upvotes
ubishi
By ubishi (7 months ago)

Hi, I've had the Nikon 18 - 200 for about 4 years now and its been used all over the world and not once have a been disappointed with the results being in mind its a super zoom and not a prime lens. I have used it for landscapes. architecture, macro ( of sorts ) portraits and moving action and as a one off lens for carrying round I believe its one of the best around and would have no problems in recommending it, The only fault I have found, and its a common problem with most superzooms, is that if the lens is hanging down there is lens creep to the full extent but once you know that its easy to control.

0 upvotes
ubishi
By ubishi (7 months ago)

The Nikon 18 -200 is a good all round lens and i've had no issues with it at all. I use it on my Nikon D80 and have done for years. the only other lens I have for the Nikon is a 100mm macro lens from Sigma and a Nikkor 50mm prime which is the lens I used to learn about composure, apertures etc. I also have a Canon 7d and the only lens I use on that is a 22 - 105 L which is the only lens I use for everything. It would be nice if you had mentioned what camera you have if you're asking for advice. You will receive better and more productive info that way.

0 upvotes
dira
By dira (9 months ago)

Im beginner i have camera 60d and lens canon 17-40 L and canon 50mm1,8 , i need lens more bokeh for me because 17-40 not too bokeh. I want use this lens for small room and use for filming , but not too blurry on the background for me with 17-40 , and when im use 50mm is too close to me, because im use for  small room 3x 4 now i have $500 and want to upgrade lens , can u help me what best lens for me i read some good lens like canon 17-55 (to upgrade 17-40) or buy sigma 30mm 1,4 or canon28mm ?

0 upvotes
sportdk
By sportdk (9 months ago)

I want to buy lins to Sony NEX7, but what to buy - SEL 18200 LE or SEL 18200. There is at lot of money at difference. Is SEL 18200 better at all the money?

0 upvotes
honey chawla
By honey chawla (9 months ago)

i am wanting to know, is tokina 12-24 f/4 lense compatible with canon 550d cam?

0 upvotes
Jackie 7D
By Jackie 7D (9 months ago)

Tokina should be compatible with canon since 550D is a crop sensor.

0 upvotes
paperkayla
By paperkayla (10 months ago)

I am thinking about buying a new Canon T4i and I want to know whether it is worth the extra money to pay for the 18-135mm STM lens kit vs. the cheaper 18-55mm STM lens kit. I just read the guide and I am still not sure because I can always purchase new, more specific lenses later but I want to start out with a great lens. Please Help!

0 upvotes
psychoticpanda
By psychoticpanda (10 months ago)

I have been shooting for years now and never bothered to change a lens or learn the difference in them. I usually just worked with what I had but now that I have understood more from this resource it makes me want to buy about 3 new lenses!

Not sure if that is a good or bad thing because I can't afford more then one right now... Haha

1 upvote
kisronnie
By kisronnie (10 months ago)

I understand F-Stop. but a zoom lens usually being labeled like this: 18-250 F3.5-6.3..... The min aperture can usually goes F22. So my question is why is there a range for the max aperture size e.g. F3.5-6.2 ?

Ron

1 upvote
denfly
By denfly (10 months ago)

This is because of the way the lenses were built. The max aperture on those lenses changes with the zoom. There are lenses that have a constant max aperture over the whole zoom range (70-200 F2.8 for example); however, these lenses are a lot larger and heavier than the lenses that do not have a constant aperture.

0 upvotes
rufaelove
By rufaelove (2 months ago)

The F3.5 - 6.2 value specifies the maximum aperture u can achieve at the specified focal length the lens can have. At focal length of 18 mm u can have a maximum aperture of F3.5 but at 250 the maximum u can have is F6.2 and you can't adjust the aperture beyond F6.2. That means at 250 mm u can't have an aperture of 4.8 or any value below F6.2. This depends on the design of the lens and u can have a lens with constant aperture but u need to be prepared to pay a substantial amount of money!

Comment edited 59 seconds after posting
0 upvotes
SinghStyleStudio
By SinghStyleStudio (10 months ago)

interesting-n-informative info

1 upvote
Footloose1949
By Footloose1949 (10 months ago)

I have one observation which is why not also specify the Angle of View of an optic? That way one can compare in a logical manner, across the different sensor/film formats, how 'different' various lenses are. However, the angle of view given, should be based on the longest side of an image, and not, as some manufacturers advertising agencies do, to make their lens specs 'look' better than they actually are, by specifying the angle diagonally (from the top L/h corner to the bottom R/h corner.

0 upvotes
WryCuda
By WryCuda (1 week ago)

The "35mm equivalent focal length" is a fairly well-established standard for comparison. It's easy to multiply by 1.5 or whatever.

0 upvotes
qwill
By qwill (10 months ago)

Yeah thanks for this guide as i am about to buy into a system,(mirrorless),and it has given me a firm understanding of the theory involved.Unfortunately i now have to put it into practice,which i know is a lot more difficult,thanks again.

Comment edited 9 minutes after posting
1 upvote
Valentinian
By Valentinian (10 months ago)

Thanks for the clear guide.
strange that Leica is not mentioned as one of " few companies still make high quality manual focus-only lenses".
By the way, this could have been a good occasion to clarify the issue of lenses made by Panasonic or Sony with Leica and Zeiss names.
what is the difference between these lenses and the lenses actually made by Leica or Zeiss?

Comment edited 2 times, last edit 2 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
ragmanjin
By ragmanjin (10 months ago)

Zeiss and Leica are the cream of the crop. These companies (like Schneider Kreuznach) still make all their lenses by hand, making sure every last detail is taken into account and every lens is tested to match very strict standards. This is different than the Leica-Panasonic and Sony-Zeiss partnerships, where Leica and Zeiss design the lenses but leave the manufacturing process up to Panasonic and Sony mass-manufacture (on a smaller scale, similar to the Schneider-Phase-Mamiya partnership). I'd keep an eye out, too, for the new Sony-Hasselblad partnership, where you're going to see the Hasselblad name (and Hasselblad prices) but with Sony's manufacturing and, probably, Sony's attention to detail. Good, but mostly motivated by a desire to financially expand out of medium-format business rather than bring pro-level quality to the masses

1 upvote
Peter K Burian
By Peter K Burian (10 months ago)

AND ... when we see so-called Schneider lenses on Samsung point-and-shoot cameras, or Leica DC on little Lumix cameras, or Carl Zeiss on Sony compact cameras ... That does kind of confuse the issue re: quality.

0 upvotes
ragmanjin
By ragmanjin (10 months ago)

Exactly. As a rule of thumb, if you see a high-end lens brand name on another company's cheap point-and-shoot camera, chances are the lens was designed by — rather than made by — that lens company

Comment edited 29 seconds after posting
2 upvotes
thanasaki
By thanasaki (10 months ago)

A very good and comprehensive article for amateur photographers and a good referece. Kudos DPreview!

2 upvotes
SonyForNow
By SonyForNow (10 months ago)

Very informative and concise. Instead of ads at the top right, why not have a beginners section/square with this and the Digital SLR Guide as a permanent links (which update periodically), like there is for Connect and Finished Challenges.

3 upvotes
LFLee
By LFLee (10 months ago)

It's rare that dp mention Pentax lenses in their review. DA15ltd and DA40 ltd featured here? wow!

3 upvotes
Kodachrome200
By Kodachrome200 (10 months ago)

I believe the folcal range example is inaccurate

0 upvotes
Andy Westlake
By Andy Westlake (10 months ago)

Thanks for you helpful feedback. Would you care to elaborate on why you believe it to be wrong?

5 upvotes
tclune
By tclune (10 months ago)

I don't know what Kodachrome200 had in mind, but I find the presentation less than satisfying. What I would like to see is a discussion that begins by stating that perspective is determined by where the photographer is standing, and the focal length basically determines the image crop. Then, I would like to see it mentioned that the relative sizes shown in the usual image apply when DISPLAYING the print as well -- to maintain the perspective without distortion, a WA print from a given perspective needs to be larger than a tele print from the same perspective unless it will be viewed from a different distance or the photographer intends to introduce a perspective distortion into the viewing experience. Unfortunately, the above discussion of focal length leaves the implications for creation and display of a photograph unexpressed, and very few people are able to read them out of the clues offered by this kind of presentation. Or so ISTM.

0 upvotes
dougc-3
By dougc-3 (10 months ago)

I think Kodachrome200 just noticed that the figures given don't all correspond exactly to the idea that you multiply by 1.5 to convert APS-C to full frame equivalence and by 2 to convert 4/3 to full frame equivalence. I assumed that this was because you were using real world typical lens focal lengths instead of hypothetical calculated ones which don't always exist in reality.

Thanks for the nice, concise review.

Comment edited 2 minutes after posting
0 upvotes
mas54
By mas54 (10 months ago)

Misleading title. It should read "...you..." not "...I..." Poor and commercial viewpoint all the way through. Anyone asking what lens to get should be buying a standard prime.

0 upvotes
Jane2012
By Jane2012 (Sep 16, 2012)

I've just bought my first canon 550d, I've found this information good to read as I was a bit complexed with it all ? This is good information thanks

0 upvotes
Coldhitz
By Coldhitz (Jul 28, 2012)

Awesome . This is a great resource .

0 upvotes
The Silver Fox
By The Silver Fox (May 21, 2012)

Thanks for this!

0 upvotes
Vishnuprasadgk
By Vishnuprasadgk (May 14, 2012)

Thanks!! Very useful for beginners like me...

0 upvotes
rhaikenking
By rhaikenking (May 2, 2012)

thank god you guys made this....

0 upvotes
Tejas Ramakrishnan
By Tejas Ramakrishnan (Mar 27, 2012)

Such a nice artilce... THinking of actually buying some thing from Amazon now, especially with their special offers coming up...

Anybody checked?

0 upvotes
ManojPB
By ManojPB (Mar 11, 2012)

Found it very useful, wish I read it before I bought camera :)

0 upvotes
AngshuArun
By AngshuArun (Dec 3, 2011)

Useful and informative.

0 upvotes
g persi
By g persi (Nov 24, 2011)

well said, i found the article informative

0 upvotes
Arkipix888
By Arkipix888 (Nov 12, 2011)

this is great....

0 upvotes
ford36
By ford36 (Oct 22, 2011)

I have a olympus slr e420 and I'm looking for a lenses that i can shoot pictures in side with out a flash but i don't know what lenses will fit my camera.can you answer this or refer me to someone who can

0 upvotes
jwbishop
By jwbishop (Oct 18, 2011)

Thanks for the article. I am researching now to find a DSLR camera and lens. This article was very helpful in learning about the different lenses.

0 upvotes
chandramohan
By chandramohan (Sep 14, 2011)

nice explanation

0 upvotes
RoelHendrickx
By RoelHendrickx (Sep 7, 2011)

Good article.
Not much new for people already into photography a bit, but very instructive for anyone starting out, and those are of course the main target audience for any buying guide.
Well done.

0 upvotes
Total comments: 58