Jeffrey S. Winn
Member
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2004
- Messages
- 29
- Format
- 35mm
Recently I've picked up a Nikon N-70 camera, as a backup to my Canon T-70 kit. My wife and I have been having fun shooting with this camera, and I'm ready to add a new lens to the 70-300mm zoom that I currently have. My goal is to add another zoom so I can cover a large range and only carry two lenses with this camera.
My reasoning for the zooms instead of primes, is because I'll be sharing this camera setup with my wife. She has been trying to find a new camera to use for taking photos while I'm on the road. These are just the usual photos of the kids at different events, nothing special except to us. Anyway, she is finally frustrated at the poor quality of her photos when she shoots indoors. The point and shoot camera that she uses just doesn't have the flash power, and too many photos are poorly lit and very grainy. Additionally, she likes the extra range of zooms coming from mainly shooting point and shoot cameras.
My goal is to add either a 28-105 AFD or a 35-105 AFD. I like the range of the 28-105 better, but the 35-105 is a little lighter, and a little cheaper on the used market. Is either lens significantly better then the other? My thoughts right now are to go for the 28-105.
Additionally, I'm looking into adding a speedlight. Is the SB-28 a good choice for this camera? I believe that it will enable us to use all of the features of the N-70, but I'm not 100% sure.
At the end of the day I want a camera that we both can use that will produce good photos. She won't touch my Canon T-70 as it is manual focus, and she can't be bothered with it. I have about four different primes that I enjoy using, and a few zooms as well. But, she will only use the Canon if I hand it to her to take a photo. My thoughts are that I can leave her the N-70 in program mode, and let her shoot away. For indoor school events, the built in flash will work in some cases, and the SB-28 will handle the situations where more power is needed.
Is this a good approach? Am I missing something?
Jeff
My reasoning for the zooms instead of primes, is because I'll be sharing this camera setup with my wife. She has been trying to find a new camera to use for taking photos while I'm on the road. These are just the usual photos of the kids at different events, nothing special except to us. Anyway, she is finally frustrated at the poor quality of her photos when she shoots indoors. The point and shoot camera that she uses just doesn't have the flash power, and too many photos are poorly lit and very grainy. Additionally, she likes the extra range of zooms coming from mainly shooting point and shoot cameras.
My goal is to add either a 28-105 AFD or a 35-105 AFD. I like the range of the 28-105 better, but the 35-105 is a little lighter, and a little cheaper on the used market. Is either lens significantly better then the other? My thoughts right now are to go for the 28-105.
Additionally, I'm looking into adding a speedlight. Is the SB-28 a good choice for this camera? I believe that it will enable us to use all of the features of the N-70, but I'm not 100% sure.
At the end of the day I want a camera that we both can use that will produce good photos. She won't touch my Canon T-70 as it is manual focus, and she can't be bothered with it. I have about four different primes that I enjoy using, and a few zooms as well. But, she will only use the Canon if I hand it to her to take a photo. My thoughts are that I can leave her the N-70 in program mode, and let her shoot away. For indoor school events, the built in flash will work in some cases, and the SB-28 will handle the situations where more power is needed.
Is this a good approach? Am I missing something?
Jeff