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Which Lenses For My Canon T3i/600d

With a Canon 600D, what is the best lens with a low price for photographing landscapes?

As some have said before, there is nothing like a ‘best lens’ for landscape photography. It depends on what kind of landscapes you like to capture, and how. Generally though, wide/ ultra wide angle lenses are preferred over telephoto lenses by most landscape photographers. It is because these lenses take in really wide expanses of hills, forests, grasslands etc, and the distortion it provides, can actually be used creatively.Anything under about 24mm (in a full frame body) can be considered wide angle, or at least in my opinion. Canon 600D on the other hand is an APS-C camera with a crop factor of 1.6. This means that a 24mm lens will work as a 38.4mm in your Canon 600D.Nothing to worry though, there are much wider apertures available in the market. A very good value for money is the Canon 10–18mm f/4.5–5.6 IS STM. You can buy this lens on Amazon, currently priced at around 19k. If you are willing to spend a little more to achieve better quality, here are a few other options. Prices mentioned here are what is displayed on Amazon as on 12th of January’18.Rokinon/Samyang SY14M-C 14mm F2.8 (26k)Sigma 10-20mm f/3.5 ex dc hsm (31k)Tamron 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5 SP Di II LD IF (28.5k)Tokina 11-16mm f/2.8 AT-X116 Pro DX II (37.5k)Tokina AT-X Pro 11-20mm f/2.8 PRO DX (43k)Canon 10–22mm f/3.5–4.5 USM (43k)I love capturing landscapes and I am always on a budget. I worked with an 18–55mm kit lens on a Canon 1100D for 5 years and only a week ago, upgraded to a Sigma 17–50 mm f/2.8 lens. The improvement is striking and I am happy with my first upgrade. I do plan to get a dedicated wide angle lens for landscapes, architecture and astrophotography soon, and my first preference is the Rokinon/Samyang 14mm f/2.8.If you have any other questions regarding lenses, feel free to ask away. I hope my answer was helpful to you and to others who might face similar issues. If you want, you can check out what kind of work I do in landscapes by visiting the following link Animesh Bordoloi (@themaphopper) • Instagram photos and videosThank you and have a great day!

Which lens hood is best for Canon t3i?

Read that again... Its "lens" hood. Please specify your lens details, you buy a lens hood for your lens, not for camera body. You'd want to know the thread size. That is the basis of buying the hood. ​

What would be the best all purpose lens for canon 600D?

18-135mm hands on. I created my whole portfolio with that and with 50mm f/1.8 before finally buying a 5D markiii. You can see those shots at flickr.com/monstermayank, yhe older photos.

Micro Four Third lens to Canon 600D (t3i) body?

If there were such an adaptor, the 4/3 lens would not cover the full sensor size of the Canon. And it is unlikely that there could be an adaptor since the back focus (flange to sensor distance) on the 4/3 lenses would be shorter than the Canon body allows (thus only very close focussing, no norm,al shots at medium or long distance). And there would be the matter of carrying all the electronic and mechanical linkages for systems with very different designs. All in all, too much like hard work for a satisfactory adaptation.

An adaptor the other way, to put Canon lenses on 4/3 sensor cameras would be easier to design, but still a lot of hard work.

Canon 6D vs Canon T3i (600D)?

The T3i is like 2 years old now ... the 6D just came out this month.

So the 6D has a full frame sensor, metal chasis, weather sealing, brand new sensor tech, built in wifi ...
The T3i is 2 years old (if I remember correctly), cheap plastic, cropped sensor ...

The 6D will be a slightly better performing camera with a MUCH better build ... what does that mean in terms of image quality? Not much really.

The 6D will perform marginally better than the T3i at higher ISO due to the larger and newer sensor but in the end, the difference won't be THAT significant. Really it will be more of a question of realiability ... do you need a camera that is weather sealed and built like a tank? If you don't then get the T3i and use the extra money to buy a flash or a nice lens or to take some basic photography classes.

Actually, after re-reading your question, I get the impression that you ALREADY own the T3i ... if that's the case then NO! It's not worth upgrading! Hell, I still use my 6 year old Rebel XSi (unless I need to shoot in low light ... it's noise performance at even medium ISO is REALLY bad) and my Rebel T1i on top of my 5DMkII.

What would be the best landscape lens for a Canon Rebel T3?

I think the camera body generally doesn’t have a lot of influence, except for the number of megapixels. The reason I say that is that you may want to crop a lot of the image and enlarge what you care about. That calls for a lot of pixels to play with. For a lens, I would probably go for a 35mm with several filters, including a circular polarizing filter, a graduated neutral density filter and a warming filter. I would also want a decent tripod and a remote control shutter release to minimize camera shake.

I have a Canon EOS 600D/Rebel t3i and I have the 18-55 mm lens and want to purchase a new one to do more street photography. Which I lens should I buy next?

Let me first begin by making clear that any lens is perfectly capable of crafting beautiful street photography. No one lens is a magic bullet that will make you do more/greater street photography. Not even the 'fabled' L-lenses. Your kit lens is actually really capable in many situations. Now, on to your question. A 35mm f/1.4L is a good choice if you enjoy the equivalent focal length of 50mm - a sworn standard for many photographers, myself included. (35mm x 1.6 crop factor = 56mm equiv - there is a useful guide explaining crop factors here: What does "crop factor" mean?) The fixed focal length of prime lenses is said to 'force you to think about your shots more' - and I think there is some element of sense in that. Also, having large apertures allows you to achieve that much desired shallow depth of field, i.e. background blur. The 50mm f/1.2 or 85mm f/1.2 lenses are also good choices if you prefer tighter fixed focal lengths. The 100mm f/2.8 is too tight for my liking on a crop sensor, especially on tighter streets. As for zooms, I personally like the 24-70mm f/2.8L for its standard focal length and for its versatility in relatively low light. There is always the 24-105 f/4L if you need the extra reach, but do keep in mind that the aperture difference will be more apparent when lights start to dim. If these are beyond your budget, there are always non "L" choices to these lenses. Cheers and all the best to your street photography :)

What is the difference between the Canon Eos 600D and the Canon EOS Rebel T3I SLR?

Ive been looking for a camera and i wanted to know what the differences between them because.. the euro one seems to be miles cheaper and you get a free lenses.. so whats the difference?


Canon 600D - http://www.google.com/products/catalog?q=canon+600d&hl=en&um=1&ie=UTF-8&tbm=shop&cid=7925447807774409730&sa=X&ei=JMqxTq-JM8K78gP6uPGZAQ&ved=0CIABEPMCMAA

Canon EOS Rebel T3I SLR. - http://www.google.com/products/catalog?q=digital+camera&um=1&ie=UTF-8&tbm=shop&cid=7051366981881603591&sa=X&ei=CMexToHuI5PA8QOurbS2AQ&ved=0CNwBEOUNMAE


THANKS ALLOT!

Which one to purchase between Canon T6 (1300d) & T3i (600d)?

The 600D is overall the better camera, I'd say. Even if their constructions are 5 years apart. But if you need WiFi, and don't need the moveable screen go for the 1300D.
Neither has GPS.
The 600D was regarded an amateur camera while the 1300D is regarded a beginner's camera (whatever that means)
So if you need (or want to have) a certain feature that one camera has but the other does not, go for the one that has it.
Anyway, have fun shooting!

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