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Archive 2009 · 50D for you wedding Photogs
  
 
stromm
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p.1 #1 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


Just wondered how many of you purchased this body and, has anybody shot any weddings with it. How do you like it and compare it to the 40D

Jan 03, 2009 at 11:21 PM
scott shoemake
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p.1 #2 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


I've heard good things about it and at the price, it's pretty hard to beat. My friend second shot with me last month using a 5D and 50D and his files looked great out of the 50D especially in high ISO (like 1600 looked good). From what I've heard the AF locks is pretty good too. I think I'll pick one up this year.

Jan 03, 2009 at 11:53 PM
Sam Hassas
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p.1 #3 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


Buying one today actually.

~Sam

Jan 03, 2009 at 11:59 PM
scott shoemake
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p.1 #4 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


Dude, Sam I'm still waiting on the 5D II you're buying me Give us a detailed report on the Sauciness of that thing.

Jan 04, 2009 at 12:00 AM
Sam Hassas
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p.1 #5 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


Mainly only buying it for the LCD resolution. The 40D's LCD is utter crap. That amongst other bells and whistles made sense to sell the 40 while it was still young and pick up a 50 for just over $1000. Will do Scott

~Sam

Jan 04, 2009 at 12:02 AM
Lucky_Dog
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p.1 #6 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


50 is nice... the 40 is just as good in the IQ department, maybe better. It IS NOT a high ISO camera. I thought it was based on the hype and was very disappointed with a wedding I shot at 1600. YMMV

Jan 04, 2009 at 02:29 AM
Mike Mahoney
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p.1 #7 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


Read an unbiased review or two before "upgrading" to the 50D. Otherwise be ready for some disappointment.

The 50D has it's niche .. and weddings it ain't.

Jan 04, 2009 at 02:45 AM
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p.1 #8 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


I had dinner last night with some of my local wedding buddies. Two have 50Ds and have shot weddings with them.
Opinion compared to teh 40D is the 50 is one stop cleaner in ISO (not pixel peeping mind you, but we're talking prints, real world output) and the one photog who shoots two bodies thinks the 50 does better in low light, focus wise.

Jan 04, 2009 at 03:06 AM
The Grays
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p.1 #9 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


We shoot with a 30D and a 5D and the 30D is great, so I am sure that the 50D is much better!

-Zach

Jan 04, 2009 at 08:24 PM
flash
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p.1 #10 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


Between the two of us we have 40D, 50D, 5D, 5D2 and 1Ds2. The 50D is marginally better in IQ, AF and ISO performance than the 40D but much better LCD. I wouldn't upgrade from a 40D. But it's a great camera if you need a new body.

I have no issues with 1600 ISO. Not as good as the 5D or 5D2 but as good as the 40D. And certainly better at 1600 ISO than any 400 ISO film ever shot with. Then again I have no issues with a bit of "grain" I've been known to add it to low ISO shots just for effect. My clients can't tell the difference and we don't get a lot of requests for low light shots to be printed at poster size. If we did we'd just use Noise Ninja on them.

Gordon

Jan 05, 2009 at 04:23 AM
 



Cathy Yount
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p.1 #11 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


Mainly only buying it for the LCD resolution. The 40D's LCD is utter crap.

Amen to that, Sam. My color on the LCD is never right and the images are much softer than normal.

We're thinking of selling the 40D to get a 50D. Put my hands on a 50D at Wolf Camera and the difference in the LCD is breathtaking.

Jan 05, 2009 at 05:37 AM
weeums
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p.1 #12 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


I'd be very curious to hear some thoughts from the FM wedding crew regarding having 2 bodies for weddings that are different. Such as Sam shooting with a 50D and a 5D2.

I had a Nikon D80 backing up my D300 last year and found it particularly annoying to have different controls to do similar things in the 2 models... and I really had to think about what lens needed to be on which camera during ceremonies and receptions to make sure I wasn't shooting too high ISO for the D80 and so on.... it really bothered me.

I ended up selling the D80 and picking up a 2nd D300 - so now everything is identical and I can use all my lens and not worry about a camera that isn't as good in low light situations and so on... it's super nice. Now my thinking is which lens do I want on the body that has the grip. Only have 1 grip for the 2 D300's ..

anyways... don't you find it hard not to have 2 bodies that match if you are actively shooting with 2 bodies? Having say in my case a D80 in the car as a "backup backup" just in case is one thing... but interchangably shooting with 2 differnt bodies really cramped my style. I know every camera has it's nitch but seriously..

thoughts?

- travis

Jan 05, 2009 at 06:03 AM
The_Duke_Of_El
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p.1 #13 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


weeums wrote:
I'd be very curious to hear some thoughts from the FM wedding crew regarding having 2 bodies for weddings that are different. Such as Sam shooting with a 50D and a 5D2.

I had a Nikon D80 backing up my D300 last year and found it particularly annoying to have different controls to do similar things in the 2 models... and I really had to think about what lens needed to be on which camera during ceremonies and receptions to make sure I wasn't shooting too high ISO for the D80 and so on.... it really bothered me.

I ended up selling the D80 and picking up a 2nd D300 - so now everything is identical and I can use all my lens and not worry about a camera that isn't as good in low light situations and so on... it's super nice. Now my thinking is which lens do I want on the body that has the grip. Only have 1 grip for the 2 D300's ..

anyways... don't you find it hard not to have 2 bodies that match if you are actively shooting with 2 bodies? Having say in my case a D80 in the car as a "backup backup" just in case is one thing... but interchangably shooting with 2 differnt bodies really cramped my style. I know every camera has it's nitch but seriously..

thoughts?

- travis


I think that there's two reasons why people have mismatched bodies.

First: money factor; obvious one here.
Second: crop; some people like having that 1.3,1.5 or 1.6 built-in teleconverter to give them the extra reach on some lenses. It also has a different feel or comfort.

It really comes down to your shooting style.

As for 40D vs. 50D I've tried both (but own neither), and I think that the 40D has really become the best bargain midrange body right now. Although it has a small-ish sensor (by today's standard), it has become the bargain the 30D became a few years ago.

Jan 05, 2009 at 06:33 AM
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p.1 #14 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


I've shot with mismatched bodies in the past, 30/20 and then 40/30. The 30/20 combo wasn't terrible, but the 30/40 drove me nuts as the 40 is soooo much better than the 30 in focus and overall speed, so I actually gave up on two bodies!

I have a 5D arriving tomorrow and will likely do the mismatched body thing at my next 2 weddings (2/14, 3/7) then i'll be getting a 5D2 in late march...so I'll have more choices then for matching/mismatching.

One local guy that runs a 1D3/5D combo just keep the 16-35 on his 1D3 and swaps lenses on the 5D all day long. Less confusion that way, and he's always ready when mom walks up and says " hey, take a pic of the four of us!"

Jan 05, 2009 at 02:42 PM
Lucky_Dog
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p.1 #15 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


I'm really not seeing an ISO improvement.... the same or maybe even a bit worse is the 50D compared to the 40D, IMO. I know you had better absolutely nail exposure at anything over 400ISO, or you will be sorry. You can't bump it up a stop in PP and get away with it like on some cameras.

Jan 05, 2009 at 02:49 PM
DB
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p.1 #16 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


weeums wrote:
I'd be very curious to hear some thoughts from the FM wedding crew regarding having 2 bodies for weddings that are different. Such as Sam shooting with a 50D and a 5D2.

I had a Nikon D80 backing up my D300 last year and found it particularly annoying to have different controls to do similar things in the 2 models... and I really had to think about what lens needed to be on which camera during ceremonies and receptions to make sure I wasn't shooting too high ISO for the D80 and so on.... it really bothered me.

I ended up selling the D80 and picking up a 2nd D300 - so now everything is identical and I can use all my lens and not worry about a camera that isn't as good in low light situations and so on... it's super nice. Now my thinking is which lens do I want on the body that has the grip. Only have 1 grip for the 2 D300's ..

anyways... don't you find it hard not to have 2 bodies that match if you are actively shooting with 2 bodies? Having say in my case a D80 in the car as a "backup backup" just in case is one thing... but interchangably shooting with 2 differnt bodies really cramped my style. I know every camera has it's nitch but seriously..

thoughts?

- travis


I thought the same thing, so grabbed a second 5D right before a wedding when my extra one wasn't available. Later I sold/traded the 5D for a 30D and the controls are nearly identical. I believe the biggest differences are between the 20/30D and 40/50D. The 30D is set up like the 5D -- at least with where all the buttons are located.

What I hate, though, is that it makes more sense to stick my telephoto lenses on the crop body. But the crop body has worse noise at 1600 than the FF camera at 3200. And I need to go higher on ISO on my telephoto shots, so it doesn't make any sense. I am considering the 1D3 because i've realized that the high ISO on the 1.3 crop might be ok with a telephoto lens

Anyway, that's why I think the 5D/1D3 combo makes more sense than the 5D/50D combo. But as far as cost goes, well...

Jan 05, 2009 at 03:12 PM
deepbluejh
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p.1 #17 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


weeums wrote:
I'd be very curious to hear some thoughts from the FM wedding crew regarding having 2 bodies for weddings that are different. Such as Sam shooting with a 50D and a 5D2.

I had a Nikon D80 backing up my D300 last year and found it particularly annoying to have different controls to do similar things in the 2 models... and I really had to think about what lens needed to be on which camera during ceremonies and receptions to make sure I wasn't shooting too high ISO for the D80 and so on.... it really bothered me.

I ended up selling the D80 and picking up a 2nd D300 - so now everything is identical and I can use all my lens and not worry about a camera that isn't as good in low light situations and so on... it's super nice. Now my thinking is which lens do I want on the body that has the grip. Only have 1 grip for the 2 D300's ..

anyways... don't you find it hard not to have 2 bodies that match if you are actively shooting with 2 bodies? Having say in my case a D80 in the car as a "backup backup" just in case is one thing... but interchangably shooting with 2 differnt bodies really cramped my style. I know every camera has it's nitch but seriously..

thoughts?

- travis


I used to shoot with a 5D and 1D Mark II. I never did like the 1D Mark II because it changed all of my lenses in ways that I didnt like. While the crop is more acceptable on the long end than the wide end, either way it robs bokeh. Instead of just using whatever lens I need at the time, I now have to think about the crop factor of my camera - which is one more variable I would prefer not to have to think about.

Having two cameras of the same format makes things a lot easier.


Jan 05, 2009 at 03:24 PM
flash
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p.1 #18 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


We've always shot with mixed formats since the 5D came out. I tend to favour the full frame but my shooting partner shoots 80% crop on his 40D/1DsII combination. It's a very personal choice. The 5d and the 20D were similar to operate and the 5D2 and 50D are almost exactly the same in layout so moving back and forward is pretty easy. For me cost wasn't the issue. It just didn't make sense to have two bodies doing the same thing when I could choose a crop body for a different "feel" when I want it. I virtually never shoot at more than 800 ISO if possible so noise and file size aren't a problem. And if i need 3200 or something ridiculous I just live with the noise to get the shot. None of my clients have ever mentioned an issue, so I don't have one either.

I do wish the 50D/5D2 batteries wer the same though.

Gordon

Jan 05, 2009 at 11:12 PM
weeums
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p.1 #19 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


Gordon...

I love your feedback and your screenname is "Flash" ... very clever!

I have to agree that the nice thing is that when I was using the D80 it still used the same battery as the D300 - and now that I have 2 D300's of course they use the same batteries... so I've found that 4 batteries between the 2 camera's has been perfect always.

good feedback from everyone.. sorry for the partial hijack of the thread. hope everyone learned something !

I learned that the 50D and the 5DmkII have essentially the same control layout and chimp screen resolution.

- travis

Jan 05, 2009 at 11:16 PM
hsw21
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p.1 #20 · 50D for you wedding Photogs


So far I've shot with 5D and either 30D or Xti.
My 17-55 is glued to my 30D or Xti for general shots and I use primes (either 28mm, 50mm, 85mm or 135mm) or 70-200 or lensbaby with my 5D.
So far works good.

Jan 09, 2009 at 07:46 AM
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