Jeez, tough question.
The 18-200s or the 28-200s make for good, general purpose, DAYTIME lenses. Good focal length, its bright sunshineso you dont have to worry about the f stop being too high, etc. Plus you can get the castle show pretty good (you do need to be about midway through the crowd for that, about 10 feet in from the curb) but still be wide enough to get that shot of Big Thunder from the rope bridge on Tom Sawyer's Island as well as some fireworks on a time exposure.
(I still like walking around with a 50 on my camera, but thats just me an my ideas.)
Others that ive heard mentioned.....
17-55 / 17-85 /28-70 .... definetlyt short, compact telephoto that is good for shooting your kids 10 feet away, but not much else.
12-24 / 17-35 ..... too wide unless youre going to be on top of your subject and have the lens wide open.
70-200 / 70-300 ..... too tight unless your shooting your kids 10 feet over there, and that castle show way over there and Albert Puljos guarding the line over at first.... Too much lens.
100-400 - If you have this lens, you can afford to pay someone to carry it for you. Not practical for much unless you're say shooting the castle show from the contemporary.....
Interesting comments, thanks. I've read a lot of people liking the 50mm, espeically the 1.4 1.7 versions.
What are your thoughts on a 30mm f1.4 on a cropped sensor?
The thing about Disney is there's all sorts of photos to take.
BUT, the 24-70 is a large and heavy lens. My friend has a 50 f/1.4 he brought once and while it was very light and made for great photos, it's definitely not wide enough. I would say use the Canon 20mm up to the Canon 35mm prime lenses, and if you want a zoom, the 17-55mm or something in the range of my lens, 24-70.
JROK said:Don't be a camera slave and miss out on the experience because you're fumbling with your camera.
Totally agree to a point. If the 50 1.4 isnt wide enough, back up 10 feet. Mid range zooms are nice if you have a full frame ccd. But the 24-70 just isn't close enough for a stage show, it really isnt.
70-200mm f4 mostly for wildlife photography at Animal Kingdom
If you can get a 1.4 teleconverter to put on the 70-200, you've got it made for DAK. 200 just isn't close enough for my liking, and the 300 w/ a converter is just too much lens (not to mention the number of times the safari has busted by lip open because the bump has sent a camera into my jaw) but soemthing ending around 300mm seems to be perfect for the safari.
There is a new Tamron 18-250mm that looks quite interesting, it gives around a 28-400mm 35mm equiv. http://www.phototestcenter.com/html/tamron_18-250.html
That sounds cool, but I would avoid Tameron and all the other third-party vendors. Think of them as Store brand Sodas..... They do the job but it's not quite right and at the end of the day you end up feeling all yuckie.
Canon should have out (or soon should have out) something that goes from 18-200 or 18-300 like Nikon does at the moment. Great dalylight lenses.
At the end, its all about how you want your photos to look. If you want that nice tight feel, aim for something that goes in tight. Like the airy feel of wide open, stick with something wide. Want good night shots? Stick with something fast. There's nothing there that accomidates EVERYTHING you could possibly want in a lens.
At the low, low price of $16,899. :lol:All I want is a Canon 16-300 f/1.4L . I don't see why that's so hard to make :drevil: Oh yea, and I want it to be easily handheld.
That's almost identical to what I take, the only difference being a 70-300 (and sometimes a fisheye depending on my mood)!I personally don't think you can manage with only one lens. There are so many different possible subjects at WDW. I usually take 3 lenses...
50mm 1.4 for streetmosohere, portraits, and low light situations where you can't use flash (inside the rides or shows)
70-200mm f4 mostly for wildlife photography at Animal Kingdom
17-85mm f4-5.6 can usually take care of everything else even macro (not great macro, but it works)
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