Re: Night photography tips
Nipar wrote:
Dear friends,
After some months at the end I gave up and I bought a... EF-M 22mm
I didn't try it yet but something suggests me I'll definitively stop using the EF-M 11-22 and I am a bit sad because of that, because a lens left at home is a lens not used; and it has been my first gear.
But if the 22mm has the same colors and same brightness of the 32mm - then I am already in love with it.
Now in my travel backpack I'll carry 22mm, 32mm, 55-250.
I think you'll be happy with the lens.
When I initially got the 22, I already had the 11-22 and thought like you do ---- why have both, aren't they similar? After quite a bit of use I have found that in fact they do have quite different uses.
The 11-22 is a great walkaround 'daytime' lens --- also doubling as an excellent ultrawide, a focal range I use a lot (near the 11mm end). Sometimes I shoot video with 2 bodies: one has the 11-22 and the other either the 18-150, EF-M 55-200, or EF-S 55-250 IS STM.
I also often carry the 22mm lens with me if I know my shooting will extend near or past sunset. I find the lens so small that I can almost always carry it along with 3 or 4 other lenses, plus 2 M6ii bodies in a medium-sized camera bag... the 22 fits into side pockets in most my camera bags. Only the 1.5x teleconverter, the Viltrox speed booster, or the Laowa 9mm f2.8 lens would also fit in those side pockets. All other lenses need to take up 'slots' in the main camera bag compartment.
The 22mm also makes a great street photography and travel lens. I often go out with just an M200 or M6ii body with the 22mm on it ---- the combo easily fits into a jacket pocket or even gym short pockets, and nobody even knows I have a camera with me until it comes out!
For me 22mm is the 'perfect' versatile 'normal' focal length. When I was shooting with film cameras, 35mm was by favorite 'normal' focal length... I always found 50mm to be a little too cramped.
The Sigma 16mm f1.4 is an incredible 'night lens', being faster than the 22mm and having less flare -- but it's a more expensive lens, and it's the widest and heaviest native EF-M lens and so it has to be a very conscious decision to put it in the camera bag. I will bring it only when I know no other lens can do the job it can do.