Jack OBrien Offline Dedicated FM Upload & Sell: Off
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Two23 wrote:
One thing that always bugs me about foamer photos is the tendency to put the engine at the very edge of the frame, about to exit. That just looks wrong to me. Wildlife photographers don't do this, sports photographers don't, and neither do wedding photographers. Composition just seems more balanced when there's some room left for the engine to "run", I think. I think the second shot would also have greatly benefitted from using a polarizer. I've learned to only use MC polarizers for photo'ing trains because of issues with ghosting.
As for the Nikon 50mm f1.8, I'm luke warm. I mostly shoot trains at night, so low light performance is important to me. I tried lenses 20mm f2.8 AFD, 28mm f1.8 (sigma), 50mm fl.8, and 85mm f1.8, all on D80 and D300. Big let down, at least for me. I replaced with Nikon 17-55mm f2.8 and Nikon 70-200mm f2.8 VR. I got less ghosting and CA. Sometimes I need a lens faster than f2.8, and for that I now turn to the Sigma 30mm f1.4. If/when I eventually buy a D700 I will replace the 30mm and buy a Sigma 50mm f1.4. I'll agree that the Nikon 50mm f1.8 is certainly decent considering what it cost on eBay. On a DX camera I've found the Sigma 30mm f1.4 a bit more useful, but then I tend to shoot wide. The new Sigmas are superb, BTW.
Kent in SD,
The Noct Foamer
Hmm, I'm wondering if you're wrapped a bit tight.... 
The reason wedding, sports, and wildlife photographers don't put trains on the edge of a frame is because they don't shoot trains....... Sorry, I just can't help it.....
The point of the 50mm f/1.8 observation is this..... at about 1/10th the price of the 17-55mm, it is an incredible lens. It's funny that your would "replace" a 50mm f/1.8 with a 17-55 when they are two entirely different lenses, in all respects.
BTW, I also shoot with the 17-55mm, and it flares like a biach when locomotive headlights are shining into it. I haven't found the 50mm f/1.8 to be any worse in this respect.
When I shoot wide, I use a WA, in my case, my 12-24mm Nikkor.
I hate polarizers.
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