Appreciate this video! Although I'm a Nikon shooter, I've been shooting on a crop sensor Nikon D3400 and love the image quality, although it took a while getting used to focusing manually instead of Auto focus...your information is VERY HELPFUL...THANKS!
Thanks for the video, very helpful. I'm about to buy the latest version of the 50mm f/1.8 for my 77D crop sensor and intend to use it mostly for portraits. Also considered the 40mm pancake but the faster 1.8 on the 50mm has convinced me that's what I want first.
Jordan, the 90D is a great camera. It has crop sensor like the ones mentioned in this video. The actual focal length of the 50mm will be 1.6 x 50 = 80mm, so it will be somewhat of a short telephoto lens. If you want to get close to 50mm, choose a 28mm lens. This yields 1.6 x 28 = 44.8 which is very close to 50mm. That being said, your 50mm will provide spectacular images.
If you want to get close to true 50mm, buy a 35mm lens. This should give you a true focal length of 53-54mm. That might be the way to go. It all depends on what you like to shoot. If you like telephoto type of shots with blurred, bokeh backgrounds, maybe stick with a 50mm.
Depends what focal length you want. If you have a Canon crop sensor camera, multiply the lens focal length by 1.6 to get the true focal length. For example, a 50mm lens on a crop sensor camera will be 50 x 1.6 = 80mm, which is a medium telephoto length. A 35mm lens will be 35 x 1.6 = 56mm, which is close to a true 50mm lens.
Appreciate this video! Although I'm a Nikon shooter, I've been shooting on a crop sensor Nikon D3400 and love the image quality, although it took
a while getting used to focusing manually instead of Auto focus...your information is VERY HELPFUL...THANKS!
Hey thanks! Glad it was helpful.
Thank you for this, sir.
Thanks for watching! Glad you liked it and I hope it was helpful.
Thanks for the video, very helpful. I'm about to buy the latest version of the 50mm f/1.8 for my 77D crop sensor and intend to use it mostly for portraits. Also considered the 40mm pancake but the faster 1.8 on the 50mm has convinced me that's what I want first.
You can't go wrong with either lens. Both are great, but the 50mm is hard to beat.
Thanks! 😉👍
i'm new to photography and bought a canon 90d with the canon rf 50mm 1.8. So will my photos not even look like 50mm?
Jordan, the 90D is a great camera. It has crop sensor like the ones mentioned in this video. The actual focal length of the 50mm will be 1.6 x 50 = 80mm, so it will be somewhat of a short telephoto lens. If you want to get close to 50mm, choose a 28mm lens. This yields 1.6 x 28 = 44.8 which is very close to 50mm. That being said, your 50mm will provide spectacular images.
so.... should i buy a 50 mm though i have a croped frame camera? (mines nikon, o is 1.53) or i should buy de 35 mm
If you want to get close to true 50mm, buy a 35mm lens. This should give you a true focal length of 53-54mm. That might be the way to go. It all depends on what you like to shoot. If you like telephoto type of shots with blurred, bokeh backgrounds, maybe stick with a 50mm.
@@jeffstefan3027 What about getting 30mm f/1.4 ? for apsc
@@deathward990 That would give you 48mm on an APSC sensor. I think Sigma makes a pretty good 30mm EF lens.
Depends what focal length you want. If you have a Canon crop sensor camera, multiply the lens focal length by 1.6 to get the true focal length. For example, a 50mm lens on a crop sensor camera will be 50 x 1.6 = 80mm, which is a medium telephoto length. A 35mm lens will be 35 x 1.6 = 56mm, which is close to a true 50mm lens.
Will this lens work on a Nikon d3300?
Sorry I’m new to cameras
No. It’s a canon
This lens will work on a 4000D/50MM,,100%