John Black Offline Dedicated FM Upload & Sell: On
|
p.1 #12 · Canon 70-200/f4 vs Sigma 70-200/f2.8 | |
I had the Sigma and loved it. I think the biggest question is - do you want F2.8 and the bokeh produced by F2.8? An F4 lens never can be an F2.8. F2.8 can really isolate the subject, and the Sigma bokeh is quite nice.
If you decide F2.8 is what you want, the next consideration is weight. Whether Canon or Sigma, the f2.8's are heavy - both around 3 pounds. Shooting handheld is do-able, but you'll want to sheet 1/200 or faster (preferably 1/400 or faster). When shooting handheld the battery grip on the 10D/20D is pretty much a given - you need it to help counter balance the nose heavy lens weight. So this makes your whole kit increase another 12 ounces in weight.
Carrying around these lenses results in bigger & heavier bags - which can be a burden if on vacation. Alot of people use the Canon F4 when they want to "travel light" and that makes alot of sense to me. Then, when they want to get serious they pull out the F2.8 bazooka!!!
I just don't consider the F2.8 and F4 variants as interchangable equals. The range is the same, but everything else after that is different. I know it's expensive, but if you can justify having both, that's the best way to go. The Sigma is a very, very good lens and I would rather have it and the Canon F4 instead of the Canon F2.8 version (comes out to about the same money).
|