What You Need To Look For When You Are Hunting For Camera Lenses

For the beginning photographer with a point and shoot camera, the choice of camera lenses is often not an issue. This is because the average digital or film camera does not permit the photographer to change the lenses that they are using. However once someone has begun to delve more seriously into photography they may choose a camera where interchanging lenses is a possibility. Then, picking the right lens for the shot that you are trying to get becomes an important consideration.

You may have heard several terms with regards to cameras. A camera can be film based, where light exposes film captures the image in this way, and digital where the light triggers a digital sensor and saves the image to a memory chip or card in the camera. There are also point and shoot cameras which come with a built in lens and single lens reflex (SLR) cameras which have interchangeable lenses. Professionals choose SLR cameras because they can be customized to the subject and light conditions with the change of a lens.

If you will be doing a lot of shooting you will want to invest in specialized lenses over time. However, your average shooter requires just one lens to get them started. For regular shooting conditions, you want one with a focal length of between 35 and 70 mm.

Why this lens? Because it allows you to get pictures which include a substantial amount of background and surrounding scenery. The image is reproduced faithfully with very little distortion. This is important if you are taking pictures of friends and family or are just shooting general scenery. The range of light that you can shoot in is also much more extensive than it may be with other focal lengths.

Many people find that they love shooting birds or wildlife. If you are shooting these kinds of subjects you need to look into purchasing equipment which can handle fast movement and shooting over longer distances than other subjects. The same choice that you purchase for animals will also work very well for sporting events. Look for a focal length that starts at about one hundred and fifty millimeters and goes to more than three hundred millimeters.

Remember that as your focal length increases, the amount of image captured by the lens will decrease. Have you ever looked through a paper tube? A short tube can still let you see a lot of a particular image. A longer tube, or a longer focal length, will produce more isolated images that tend not to include a lot of surrounding scenery.

If you want to shoot images of things like buildings you may want a wide angle lens. Buildings may call for a very small focal length and landscapes can have a longer focal length. This is because you want to get a lot of the scenery in but not get a lot of distortion. The balance between perspective and the amount of an image you can capture with a lens has been a bit of a balancing act for many years.

Once you start collecting camera lenses you may find it difficult to stop. However, despite the fun things you can do with your collection you will often find that there is one to which you return time and time again.

For the beginning photographer with a point and shoot camera, the choice of camera lenses is often not an issue. This is because the standard digital or film camera does not permit the photographer to change the camera lense.

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