To the rambling wizard Vic,

What you say makes a lot of sense, but you are leaving out a big factor of
my lens.  It's wider.  Ya we can nit-pick about quality and in the end it
doesn't really matter.  But as I addressed in reply to Bruce Dayton's email,
why is mine costing slightly more than an FA* with f/2 and not f/4, both are
AL.  Both are highly recommended.

As I said to Bruce, where does that leave us?  I didn't answer him, because,
I don't know ;-)

Main thing is, if Shawn has already ordered or picked up that lens and is
happy with it that's all that matters, as I'm perfectly content with mine.
Happy happy joy joy!

Brad

----- Original Message -----
From: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Sent: Thursday, November 14, 2002 12:08 PM
Subject: Re: SMCP FA 20-35mm long boring ramble


> Brad I agreed with you that I would buy the 20-34/4 over the 24/2 but not
> because they are equal and that modern zooms are equal to primes.
> Life is a compromise and so too are lenses. The problem photographers get
> into (I think) is getting too anal about the quality of the lenses. You
can
> have the greatest lens in the world but if you don't use it, it is not
much
> good. (Bear with me here folks)
> An average performing lens in the hands of a capable photographer with
good
> technique will result in better pictures than a great lens with poor
> technique. In addition, if you are taking pictures for yourself, or even
for
> publication at no bigger  than say 11 by 14, I don't think it really
matters.
> Good technique is the more important factor than the quality of the lens.
> Okay, the 24/2  will give a better image (all else being equal) than the
> 20-35f4. But I doubt anyone could really see the difference anyway so who
> cares.
> Now the zoom is much more useful than the straight 24, so in my book it
wins
> out. I will use it more than the straight 24 and I wouldn't care about the
> slight increase in quality I would get from the 24mm.
> But to say the zoom is equal to the 24 is going too far. It might be as
sharp
> but distortion would likely be more, contrast probably would not be as
good
> etc etc. Does it matter, in 95 per cent of the time no, in 5 per
cent --maybe.
>
> Now the other issue is photographers always wanting the best possible
lens.
> Why? Because we feel that, all else being equal, we do not want inferior
> images because we cheaped out on the glass. It's a good argument providing
> the photographer's technique is flawless. If technique is not perfect we
> might as well use cheap, third rate glass.
>
> The final argument of course is the whole low light argument where the 24
> gives you that extra stop. I say fine if you want to shoot wide open and
> accept softer images great. The main reason I like fast lenses is not to
> shoot them wide open, but the nice bright view through the camera's
finder...
>
> My rambling is getting out of hand...
> Vic
>

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