Recently I've been getting a lot of questions about clarity. This leads me to the answers about lenses. You know, if you are not a good lens, you still have a good photo usually have.
The reason why I say that is much better than a professional SLR camera or a prosumer point and shoot, because my desire to look "pro" when I make his photos, because the degree of control you have over the photo. You can use the light is so much more control, you can control the exposure and thegeneral aspects of the image. And with that freedom comes the choice to get the clarity of the lens. To win, the ultimate freedom in razor-sharp image, first all you need to know what lens, what does.
Fixed focal length lenses
A fixed focal length lens is a lens that most point and shoot and prosumer cameras is. They are usually an average wide angle lens. There is no such thing as a "mid-range quality" lens. Then, when you compare it with a zoom lens and the two, a fixed focal length, issmaller and often has a greater opening up. That's good, because they work fairly well in low light situations. These lenses seem clearer than zoom lenses. The only problem is that your person or object appear smaller than you want, when you can move in closer.
Zoom Lenses
And what a zoom lens? Without going into too technical details, zoom lenses are often more practical focal lengths for digital photography. There you can get a good angleProspects for completing the frame, for example. These lenses are great if you want to come closer to the recording if it is impossible to get a little closer.
Optical zoom lenses are the best. My advice to you would be completely forgotten, digital zoom. Digital zoom is not a true zoom, in other words, it is not a true reflection of what is there. You only get more noise on the image that you can not actually be processed.
The problem with zoom is that it easily the closer you lose. Theyhave lower openings, and can be difficult even in low light conditions. In some situations it is possible to use the flash, and have adequate lighting, but other times you this because you zoom away from the subject and the flash is only effective within several meters.
There is no general answer to "What lens should I?" The answer is: it depends on what your camera sees and what you can do yourself. But the more one understands what lenses, what, the better you arean informed decision and the right lens for the job.
Best wishes,
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