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35mm or 50mm, which is your main lens?

MIT. 25:35

MIT. 25:35

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For street shooting with Leicas: 35mm f2 Summicron
For shooting dance performances: 90mm f2 Summicron

For portraits with Nikons: 105mm f1.8 Nikkor
For walking around with Nikons: 28-105mm Nikkor zoom

I won't go into other formats...
 
For people shots (quick on the go candid portraits) I use a 50mm. For all around shooting and multiple people shots I use a 35mm. I tend to stay away from using a 35mm when there is only one person in the frame mostly because the slight wide angle distortion is noticeable, especially in head shots.
 
I have owned cameras for thirty eight years, and did not own a fifty milleter lens until a month or so ago.
Bobby
 
I have 4 Nikon bodies. One has a 85mm permanently mounted, another has a 35mm permanently mounted and the third & fourth bodies may have any of 7 other leneses mounted depending on the situation.
 
Usual carry-around lenses for my SLR and RF 35mm

I was wondering what APUGers use as their carry around lens?

Also, I opened the back of my SLR accidentally :<

Terrible things seem to happen to my camera, first my lightmeter, now this!

It had a great shot on it too!

Also, I only have 1 roll of film left, and a few rolls of MF for the holga.

Would it be funny to use a $20 camera on a almost $500 tripod?

My usual carry around lens on a 35mm SLR camera is a 20mm.

My usual carry around lens on a 35mm RF camera is a 21mm.

With 35mm Cameras I usually use a tripod only when shooting with long focal length lenses.
 
I have never seriously used the 35mm focal length, first of all, but am quite intimate with the 50mm, my first love. It's my answer to the "only one lens: which?" question, because it's neither wide nor long (and therefore can be either to certain extents, with technique) and because I know it well. Someone on one of these websites once described it as "cinematic" and I have to agree with that, although I can't articulate why this is so. It's a good main focal length for me because, in addition to it's versatile perspective, it can be bought new cheaply which means I can have a couple of the same on a couple of bodies, plus a back up in the bag, all for the price of many other lenses, used or new. I like it because it's "boring". It doesn't reek of optical effect, which can be used mightily to the photographer's advangage, interestingly enough.

Right now, however, I am getting to know the 20mm, and it's freakin' me out!
 
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If I could choose a single lens for 35mm work, I would choose a 35mm lens (Canon 35L to be exact :smile: ).
 
I love my 50mm lens. It's sharp (even when wide open) and fast. Although shooting with a 35mm lens has advantages, I always come back to the 50mm.
 
50mm Summicron on my Leica. I have a 35 mm summicron as well. But seldom put it on. The 50 can get closer to people without making them look ugly, for example.
/m
 
I didn't fully appreciate a 50mm until I bought a Leica and only had a 50mm Summicron to use on it for several months. My next lens was a 35mm. I now have two Leicas and I keep a 35mm on one and a 50mm on the other almost all the time. I've also added 50mm lenses to fit my other 35mm cameras. I guess I'm a slow learner--it took me nearly 30 years to discover how useful a 50mm lens can be.

As for the film in the camera when you opened it--as someone else said, develop it unless you've already tossed it out. I've done the same thing and was surprised to have only lost a couple of frames.
 
I normally keep my 50mm on my EOS 3 since I like to travel light. It's pretty versatile and fast enough to use indoors without flash. When I need wider and have a flash available, I'll go for my 24-70mm 2.8 lens.
 
I have both the 50mm and 35mm Canon FD lenses and if I had to choose one for general outdoor shooting of people and places it would be the 50mm.
 
I do the zoom thing with 35mm. I have a Vivitar Series I that stretches from 35-85mm focal length at f/2.8. It's a really nice lens that's incredibly sharp and handles contrast very well.
Then I get the odd bug and use an 18mm ultrawide for low-to-the-ground stuff; Sigma 2.8), or my Pentax prime lenses where I tend to like the normal to telephoto lenses, my favorites are the 55mm f/2 and the 135mm f/3.5.
It all seems to depend upon the mood and the subject matter, and it's hard to see a trend since I so seldomly use 35mm (but love it when I do).
- Thomas
 
I have both the 35mm f1.4 Nikkor and 50mm f1.4 Nikkor. Of the two I prefer the 85mm f1.4 Nikkor. :smile:
 
50mm CV Heliar on the Leica CL but oddly almost always use the 35mm F2 Nikkor on the F3. Go figure.
 
Hello, folks!
At this point in my photographic history, I'm using pretty much exclusively my 55mm lens--from what I've read, Minolta gave consumers, back in the 60's, a choice of either a 50 or the 55. I got the 55mm--I'm not the original owner of this Minolta 101.
I hope to "expand" my horizons, by using my new-to-me macro and my new-to-me 135mm, soon.
 
"35mm or 50mm, which is your main lens?"

I have a 35mm f/1.4 and a 50mm f/1.4. The 35mm is my personal preferece as a main lens.
 
My 'Standard' lens is a 50mm 1.7 Minolta AF but I can use a 28mm as almost as frequently.

The only lens I have a 35mm are all zooms, which are mostly in the 35mm-70mm range.

Jim
 
35mm is my favorite focal length on 35mm. I think it preserves some of the flat/'normal' look of a 50, but with a wider FoV that I feel better addresses the way we see the world: with two horizontally spaced lenses, not one.
 
I have switched

For years I have used only a 50mm lens with 35mm camera system. Recently I have switched to a 35mm lens, and I love it. One big reason is the wider view, and another is increased depth of field.
 
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