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Thread: So tell me about lenses...

  1. #1
    Fuddlestack's Avatar
    Fuddlestack is offline S.C. Regular
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    So tell me about lenses...

    I have an E-P3 + 14-42mm on the way for Christmas. My birthday looms mid-January, and seems an excellent opportunity to build a small battery of lenses. My shooting habits flip from street to landscape, the latter mainly during long-distance cycling expeditions.

    I'd be delighted to receive people's recommendations for a couple of lenses to supplement the somewhat bread-&-butter 14-42, bearing in mind that the available budget will not be excessive.

    Cheers!
    JohnE
    "This way!" cried Beaky, "Follow me!" and ran head-first into a tree.

    Kit: Nikon D300s, D200, D40; Nikon 18-200mm VR, Tokina 12-24mm, Sigma 70-200mm f/2.8, 105mm macro + a bunch of others; Nikon 1 J1, Oly E-P3, Pana FT-3, Canon G12. Gigapan Epic.


    http://www.pbase.com/johnewing

  2. #2
    greyelm's Avatar
    greyelm is offline S.C. Top Veteran
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    I recommend the Pana 20mm f1.7. This is a superb lens, check the image thread. Being a pancake it will make the camera pocketable.
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  3. #3
    Luke's Avatar
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    You should certainly have either the Olympus 17mm (and there should be a BUNCH of them hitting the used market soon with them releasing a fancy new 17mm) or the Panasonic 20mm (I shot almost exclusively with that lens for over a year). If you have either of those, you can probably leave your kit zoom at home.

    The Panasonic 45-200 is a steal of a lens in the price to performance ratio.

    Enjoy your new camera! The E-P3 is great camera.


  4. #4
    pdh
    pdh is offline SC Leading Farmer
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    The trouble is, they're all good ... prepare therefore to be deluged by a torrent of advice by people to buy their own favourite!
    (mine's the 17mm so you should definitely buy one)

    Judging by your signature, you're not exactly a beginner ... pick a couple of favourite focal lengths and start shooting;
    My photostream at Flickr.com is here
    "We can not shake the illusion of the truthfulness of photography" - William Gedney

  5. #5
    greyelm's Avatar
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    +1 on the 45-200, fantastic for wild life.
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  6. #6
    Yeats's Avatar
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    I have a "Dream kit" involving the EPL3, but who knows if I'll ever get it?

    Anyway, have you considered the Olympus WCON-P01? Seems like an intriguing and affordable way to go wide... Amazon.com: Olympus WCON-P01 Wide Angle Converter For Olympus 14-42mm MFT Lens: Camera & Photo
    Panasonic LX7
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    Crazy cat dude, m30w.


  7. #7
    stanleyk is offline S.C. Top Veteran Donor
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    I used MFT for awhile. There are some really good lenses. I tend to agree that the Panasonic 20mm is the best lens I used with that format from a price/performance ratio. I don't particularly like zoom lenses so I'm not sure on those. Actually the Panasonic 14mm is really for the price. The Olympus 12mm is supposed to be very good, but now you are at a price point where you better like the focal length. The Olympus 45mm is a very good lens too.

  8. #8
    Fuddlestack's Avatar
    Fuddlestack is offline S.C. Regular
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    Thanks, all.

    I do have a liking for wide angle and most of my formative shooting was done with primes: in the 60s you took whatever Kodak had glued into the lens cell, but even in the 80s I did most of my stuff with a 24, a 50 and a doubler. Still got them all, too. Well, just one of the Kodaks.

    Anyway, plenty of grist for the mill here. The Panny 20 is a definite runner - nice bokeh on the DP Review shots, and decent sharpness across the frame from 2.8 to 4, judging by their test results. I do like short f rather than standard, and the 17 edges a bit that way with a good shove from the $$$ aspect. But that converter has really got my attention - definite wish-list item.

    Thing is, I've got a TZ30 being re-assessed by the local camera shop - I say it's just a lousy camera, they say it might be defective and have sent it for repair - and if it is simply lousy and I get a refund I'll swap it for a GF3 to produce on Christmas Day for the missus. If that happens, we could build a nice wee pool of lenses. We did with OM1's & 2s in the 80s, then diverged.

    Another one I've been looking at is the Samyang 7.5 f/3.5, but I'm not sure it wouldn't just be a novelty that'd wear thin pretty quickly. Anyone tried it?

    Cheers.
    JohnE
    "This way!" cried Beaky, "Follow me!" and ran head-first into a tree.

    Kit: Nikon D300s, D200, D40; Nikon 18-200mm VR, Tokina 12-24mm, Sigma 70-200mm f/2.8, 105mm macro + a bunch of others; Nikon 1 J1, Oly E-P3, Pana FT-3, Canon G12. Gigapan Epic.


    http://www.pbase.com/johnewing

  9. #9
    Luke's Avatar
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    I tried the fisheye, but didn't give it a fair chance. Using one well is a discipline unto itself and for me the learning curve was just too steep. In the hands of most users frankly, it is a novelty.


  10. #10
    Lawrence A. is online now S.C. Veteran
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    My personal favorites are the PL Summilux 25mm f1.4 and the Olympus 45mm f1.8, and I'll be getting the new 17mm f1.8. I'm not really a wide angle guy, so probably will buy the cheaper Panasonic 14 over the olympus 12.

    The panasonic 20mm is a wonderful lens, but I sold mine to help finance the purchase of the PL25mm, which, though large, is really a "must have" lens for m4.3 shooters who love the traditional "normal" point of view.

    Good luck. Enjoy your new camera. I've found m4/3 meets all my needs for a digital system.

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