Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Photography and portraiture - How to choose a 5DRS lens to shoot landscapes and people?

How to choose a 5DRS lens to shoot landscapes and people?

Rienhoff and Sinatra, 90mm, 135mm, 150mm lenses, super-heavy tripod, small aperture, long exposure and super depth of field were used to shoot the scenery. These are the costumes of the masters of that year.

Modern:

28-85mm, 35-70mm or 28- 105mm (full-frame camera, 1: 1 focal length).

Portrait: 50mm focal length (header), 70mm, 75mm or 85mm medium focus lens (very necessary, often used in portrait photography), 105mm or 135mm can be used for portrait close-up.

In fact, 55mm and 85mm macro fixed-focus lenses are the strengths in portrait photography.

Scenery:

Traditional landscape photography uses a 50 mm standard lens.

Modern is not so harsh, you can shoot with a small wide angle of 28mm and 35mm (especially "Come here");

You can take some close-ups with a longer focal length.

For traditional standard cameras (full-frame cameras, the equivalent focal length ratio is 1: 1).

28mm-2 10mm, which is a relatively normal focal segment. Coverage: (wide angle: 28mm, 35mm;; Standard: 50mm;;

Medium coke: 70mm, 75mm, 85mm;; Telefocus: 180mm, 2 10mm)

It is better to have full focal length macro function.

Less than 28mm is called super wide angle; Anything over 200mm is called super telephoto.