【視聴数 19604】
【チャンネル名 ArtoftheImage】
【タグ photography,photo,photographer,4K video,videographer,pic,camera,digital camera,DSLR,4K Ultra,portrait lens,Nikon D7500,D7500,Nikon D7500 portrait lens,lens,lenses,portraits,50mm,50mm lens,nikon 50mm f1.8,nikon 50mm f1.4,f1.4 lens,f1.8 lens,bokeh,depth of field】
Hi can you please help me with choice. Which lenses are similar to old Helios lenses to achieve that swirly bokeh for Nikon D7500.
Hello ArtoftheImage, will D autofocus lenses work with my Nikon D7500? for example 75-240mm F/4.5-5.6D autofocus lens. Thank you!
I’ve watched probably a dozen of your videos now and I finally can’t hold my tongue on this, you never actually answer the question asked. You just hedge your bets and say that every option has advantages & disadvantages, which is something everyone knows already when they ask you the question. You never commit to an answer ever. The 50mm is perfect for APS-C sensor BUT the 85mm is also great. How does that help anyone?
Also, you fail to discuss really important things, like when you were saying the D7500 has its own AF motor so it can take the older AF lenses as well as the newer G lenses. One major advantage for going with the older AF lenses besides price is that they are full frame lenses. The G lens series includes DX primes that can’t be put on full frame cameras. Buying the older AF is cheaper AND if he ever upgrades to a full frame then he won’t have a useless DX. This is becoming an extremely important issue now that it seems DX is not going to last much longer considering how big sensors are getting in mirrorless cameras (there are even pocket cameras with APS-C sensors in them).
When you discuss f1.4 vs 1.8 lenses you seem to just summarize how lenses work rather than answering the question asked. He says he will be shooting pictures of babies, families, elderly (i think is what you said) OUTSIDE. So first of all, he is going to be outside shooting so low-light issues are not a concern so the one slight advantage of the f1.4 is the extra 3/4 of a stop of light is not in play. The Nikon f1.4 lenses compared to the f1.8’s always sacrifice local contrast, color saturation, sharpness, and increase haze, flare, & chromatic aberrations. I think every video on youtube comparing them comes to the same conclusion so you probably should have told him that since he is shooting on a DX camera outside the f1.8 makes way more financial sense and is actually going to give him better results for what he is shooting.
You then talk about the better Bokeh from shooting at f1.4 . Yes, there is a creamier bokeh and shallower DoF with the f1.4 but the DoF is so shallow that he would be out of his mind to be shooting family portraits at f1.4. You can’t possibly get multiple people in focus at f1.4 outside. Same for baby photos. Imagine a baby moving around and he has to make sure he focuses perfectly on the eye and even the slightest movement will make the face look out of focus. Even when he could use an f1.4 to shoot people outside it would be like playing with fire to shoot at f1.4 hoping he didn’t accidentally focus a half an inch off. Even if he took high burst photos more than half will probably have weird looking focus. It may be artsy to have a face half out of focus but it’s not what most people want from a family photo and it’s not something he needs for his FIRST lens.
Oh and if it’s sunny outside he is going to have to stack neutral density filters on the lens to shoot at f1.4. Didn’t even discuss that.
Why would an amateur photographer with a DX prosumer (not dissing DX I shoot my DX all the time, love the reach) buy as his first lens a $1,000+ lens that literally costs more than his fucking camera? That’s just silly that you even suggest that.
I get it that your thing is you answer questions by actually highlighting the value of all the lenses that the companies send you to advertise for them. I don’t even blame you for doing it. If someone would pay me or give me free gear to do that I totally would.
The simple answer to this was 50mm AF f1.8 from $75. It’s objectively the best answer to this question. Could have made the video 20 seconds.
How about the 50 1.8D.?
85/1.8G is great lens, very sharp with good bokeh, also full frame so if you ever go ff this is still a great portraits lens, while 50mm will be too short. On dx the 85mm allows for more distance to the subject which is usually a good thing. Autofocus is fast so you won’t miss many expressions. It balances great with the 7500 body.
Following from india…
Outstanding information it’s very helpful for me….
Thank you so much sir….
how do i know if a lens is compatible with a d7500?
Does the d lens auto focus on the d7500?
I am buying d7500 for products photography please advise what kind lens
I can use thanks alot mostly use for home textile products towels pillow cases and extras
Cheapest, sharpest, Nikkor lens is the 50mm 1.8D. In the hands of a talented, budget-minded, portrait photographer, it’s a gift.
Pls I need 28-300 n nikon 7500
I have excellent results with the nikor 105mm macro. It was not cheap and most people balk at the idea of using that lens for portraits, but if you work with it the image quality is stunning.