brainiac Offline Dedicated FM Account Locked
|
p.1 #7 · Are range-finders still best for low-light? | |
I agree with Belsha et al.. In my experience the best low light results of any equipment I have ever used are with Canon 5D on account of its remarkable performance at 1600 and even 3200 iso. Since it can take good pictures at 6400 iso, the 1Diii is the successor to the 5D at low light, but it's a brick. The M8 struggles in low light because it has noisy high iso performance and lower resolution. At these high isos, lens performance is not quite so critical since the camera isn't performing at its highest resolution anyway. Mirror vibration makes no visible difference and should be completely ignored. Good technique is far more significant.
Accurate focus at widest apertures is best gained by focus bracketing when possible, although with practice it is just as easy to focus a 5D accurately as an M8. Use Canon's Ee-S screen, not a third party one.
There are many wide aperture lenses which give excellent results wide open. To mention a few: cheap options include the Olympus f2 wides (21, 24, 28, 35) although they vignette a lot. Spendier are the Canons 24f1.4, 28f1.8, 35f1.4, 50f1.0, 50f1.2, 85f1.2, 135f2, 200f1.8. If you want to pay for arguably the best, go for Zeiss 28f2, 35f1.4, 55f1.2, 85f1.2. Other people will recommend Leica R lenses too, but make sure you like that 2D look.
Remember, high iso performance is key, because every aperture stop you open up makes really accurate focus harder to find. In other words, a fast camera is going to give you better results than fast lenses.
|