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Beginner with D3200   -   Page   1
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Posted: Wed Nov 26th, 2014 10:44
 
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Waldo



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Picked up a Nikon D3200 recently....

Just thought I'd make my first post and say hi!

This is my first DSLR. While I've taken pics with other peoples DSLR's (and they usually come out pretty well) I've finally taken the step towards really getting into it and got my own.

I mainly got into photography due to cars (my main passion) and that cell phone camera just wasnt cutting it for what I wanted to do.

Anyhow, just thought I'd post here since I'm a beginner and gotta start someplace. So you'll probably start seeing more posts/threads from me around here

 




Posted: Wed Nov 26th, 2014 12:33
 
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Robert



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Hi Waldo, and welcome.

If you hit any snags just ask, we all hit snags occasionally!

What lens do you have with the D3200? I have a D3100 which has an 18-105 Nikkor pretty well permanently I bought the D3100 for video of plants but never really used it for that yet. I do however use it for my car pix. It saves my D200 from getting bashed around in the workshop while I am welding and machining stuff for my cars. Although crazy it sounds, I have been using my iPhone for that recently! LOL Probably because I was just too lazy to go and get the DSLR for a few shots.



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Posted: Wed Nov 26th, 2014 12:49
 
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jk



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Hi Waldo, and welcome to the forum.

I am sure we can give you help and advice if you need it.


If you have problems then please just start a new topic in the cameras forum and ask away.



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Posted: Wed Nov 26th, 2014 12:58
 
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Waldo



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Currently I have the kit lense that comes with it, so the 15-55?

I'm looking to get a 50mm so I can get those wide shots, and I'll need something with more zoom at some point...however since I'm just getting into it, I'm trying not to blow through a grand right away haha

 




Posted: Wed Nov 26th, 2014 18:00
 
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jk



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If you want wider than the 18-55 kit lens then you need to look for a 14mm lens. You are now in expensive territory.



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Posted: Wed Nov 26th, 2014 18:36
 
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Waldo



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Ya I've noticed it's not a cheap hobby/profession...

14mm, ok I'll look around. I also like the fish eye look, any suggestions on something affordable but still good quality?

 




Posted: Thu Nov 27th, 2014 03:49
 
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Eric



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Waldo wrote:
Ya I've noticed it's not a cheap hobby/profession...

14mm, ok I'll look around. I also like the fish eye look, any suggestions on something affordable but still good quality?


Hi Waldo
Welcome to the forum.
I am not sure if the excellent Sigma 10-20 lens can be used on your camera. Robert or Jonathan will be able to confirm this. If it can, then it would be top of my list of recommendations for wider than 18mm.

For fisheye effect you need to be down below 10mm. At these short focal lengths, tight focusing is frequently unnecessary, so manual focusing shouldn't be a constraint.

Kelda and Peleng do a cheapish 6.5mm and Vivitar do an 8mm.
Cant vouch for quality but frankly, creative distortion takes centre stage with fisheye lenses and people don't look that closely to see if its tack sharp.



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Posted: Thu Nov 27th, 2014 04:01
 
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jk



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Yes the Sigma 10-20 can be used as it is a HSM lens.
If you want to get really wide angle shooting then this lens or the Tokina equivalents are very good.



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Posted: Thu Nov 27th, 2014 07:01
 
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Robert



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I saw your mention of the 50mm lens and the comment about it's 'wideness'. The 50 is a very good lens which on the D3200 is a slightly telephoto f1.4 or f1.8, trouble is you need an 'S' version because the D3200 does not have a focus motor in the body which the non 'S' lenses need. The big advantage the fast lenses bring is that they can take photographs in very dim light without flash, flash often destroys the atmosphere of low light photographs. Also you can make the background very out of focus, which can be appealing to some.

The Sigma 10-20 is a super lens and is my only other lens which will work on my D3100. It can be used to very good effect in many situations, especially photographing cars, front corner or under the hoodI have many nice pix of race bikes taken with the 10-20 Sigma. One tip is not to shoot at the very widest setting just take it in a tad and it helps the distortion. You would need an off camera flash because the petal lens hood creates an ugly shadow in the image.

For budget I do have (don't tell anyone!) a screw on wide angle/fisheye adaptor, which screws on to the front of the lens, some movie cameras have them. I have used that in the past to get a photograph where nothing else would do the job. As Eric said, with such an image the viewer doesn't really notice a slight lack of sharpness due the the low quality of the lens.

This is a pic of my daughter Louise taken with my Nikkor 50mm f1.4 @ f1.4 NO flash! It was almost dark and as I remember the only light was a camp fire and a lantern.

Attachment: Screen Shot 2014-11-27 at 12.51.42.jpg (Downloaded 26 times)



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Posted: Thu Nov 27th, 2014 07:05
 
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Robert



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Here is one with the 10-20 Sigma, I have tons of shots with it, this is just one which I came across just now.

A racing Berkly at Mallory park.

Attachment: Screen Shot 2014-11-27 at 12.57.50.jpg (Downloaded 24 times)



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