I discovered that if you carefully purchase used equipment, you can experiment and not lose money buying and selling. I also discovered that better cameras cry out for better lenses - and vice versa. By the end of 2010, I had migrated to the newer 50D and some good L lenses.
Still, with the crop factor of the 50D bodies, I wasn't getting the same "feel" of the old film days. So, I decided, this past Spring, to pick up a used 5D full frame body. It was so what I was looking for that I swapped out some lenses to fit that setup and ended up with the kit I described here.
In the process, however, I went backward three years in camera technology. The 50D was announced in August 2008, the 5D in August 2005. Some of the features added in that time are live view shooting, automated sensor cleaning, micro focusing adjustments, larger and better LCD screens, and, of course, resolution in the form of more megapixels. For me, however, it's worth those compromises in order to affordably attain full frame 35mm photography.
The one advantage I missed from the 50D, however, was the crop factor making long lenses longer. The 12.7 megapixels of the 5D isn't nearly enough to crop a photograph to that field of view with the necessary quality. The 21.1 megapixel 5D mark II, however, delivers images that, when cropped to a 1.6 field of view, are the equivalent of an 8 megapixel camera. The 5dII, however, with New York State sales tax, is still over $2000 new and nearly that used.
My solution was to go back to the past and, for less than $300, pick up an 8 megapixel 30D, the model I started with, to use with long lenses when I wanted extra "reach". Yes, it's two generations older than the 50D bodies I sold to get the 5D bodies but it's design is six months newer than the 5D and the two cameras share almost the exact same controls and interfaces. Below is a shot I took yesterday through a glass storm door. Resized, but not cropped.
Canon EOS 30D, EF 300mm f/4L IS, ISO 400, f/5.6, 1/250 sec. |
My New Year's resolution is to stop thinking about gear so much and, having built a system that should be capable of some good photography, go and make some good photographs. I plan to be able to state on July 1, 2012 that my kit is exactly the same as it was on January 1, 2012. Tune in then and we'll see.
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