Thanks for the insite on that. I didn't think the 1.8d was an awful lens but when I compare it to my 35mm sigma art yes it's is softer I'll admit. I did however think if I can get the 50 1.8g at a decent price it might be a worth while buy then that's why I'm asking folks here like yourself for their input.There are no nice nikon 50mm lenses. I'm sure people will moan at that, but it's true! The best 2 are the 1.8G and the 1.4D. I sold my 1.4G as it s as soft and sooo slow to focus.
You'll notice an improvement in micro contrast with the G when shooting into the light. If I could have got a 1.8G for £100, I'd see it as a good investment. If you want a good auto focus 50mm, then the Sigma art is your only real choice. It's very big and very expensive. In the end I didn't have Modern 50mm, just a new 28, 35, 85 and made do with my 50mm 1.4D.
Hopefully Tamron will come out with something equally good and cheaper in the 50mm range. For now it's either a compromise or a large bill!I'm in the same boat, so I watching with interestI was pretty much hoping that the answer wasn't the Sigma 50mm art [emoji38]
There are no nice nikon 50mm lenses. I'm sure people will moan at that, but it's true! The best 2 are the 1.8G and the 1.4D. I sold my 1.4G as it s as soft and sooo slow to focus.
You'll notice an improvement in micro contrast with the G when shooting into the light. If I could have got a 1.8G for £100, I'd see it as a good investment. If you want a good auto focus 50mm, then the Sigma art is your only real choice. It's very big and very expensive. In the end I didn't have Modern 50mm, just a new 28, 35, 85 and made do with my 50mm 1.4D.
There are no nice nikon 50mm lenses. I'm sure people will moan at that, but it's true! The best 2 are the 1.8G and the 1.4D. I sold my 1.4G as it s as soft and sooo slow to focus.
You'll notice an improvement in micro contrast with the G when shooting into the light. If I could have got a 1.8G for £100, I'd see it as a good investment. If you want a good auto focus 50mm, then the Sigma art is your only real choice. It's very big and very expensive. In the end I didn't have Modern 50mm, just a new 28, 35, 85 and made do with my 50mm 1.4D.
Hmm.... I'm not sure what to do at the minute then... The sigma 50mm is out of my budget to be honest and is expensive for my current needs... Perhaps down the line, however if I thought there was a increase in quality with the nikon G version then I would have went with it but as stated it seems not enough of an improvement and sometimes not over the D to he a worth while change. I currently have a few lenses
Nikon 50mm 1.8D
Tamron 24-70 2.8
Sigma 70-200 OS
Sigma 35mm Art
I know yes the 24-70 kind of covers the 50mm but as you know I'd like a little more light hence using the 50mm 1.8.
I'm puzzled now on what to do.
I like your style. Might be best I stay put for now and as you say improve my photography.Do nothing, don't spend money on kit, spend money making you a better photographer. Book a course, book a trip, buy a train ticket somewhere cool.
Your kit is decently comprehensive for most situations. The only 'obvious' gap is a fast short telephoto prime in the 85 to 135mm range for portraits or where you want to blur backgrounds, but that's far from necessary depending on what you normally shoot.
I'd go with Nawty TBH.
Tamron's offering is a 45mm f/1.8. But it's not cheaper than the Sigma (though smaller).Hopefully Tamron will come out with something equally good and cheaper in the 50mm range. For now it's either a compromise or a large bill!
My view (having owned a 1.8D, 1.4D and 1.4G) would be to stick with what you have, there really isn't enough difference between them to justify changing and the AF on the 1.4G is sloooow. With that slow AF it really points you towards the 1.8G at which point I think what's the point? what else could you spend the money on? a good filter would give you much more creative options than basically the same lens
It might have been @HoppyUK that once posted a shot of the 1.8D on a D800 to show just how much resolution it was capable of (LOADS!).
personally I can't see much difference in sharpness between that and the 35 & 85mm f1.8G's I also have.
I've not shot with the 35mm but the 85mm f1.8g I had was noticeably sharper than both 50mm f1.8g's I've had.I'm not sure about an upgrade from the D version as I haven't shot with one of those, but I have a 50mm 1.8G I had recently when I bought my Df and been really pleased with it, I find it nice and sharp wide open - personally I can't see much difference in sharpness between that and the 35 & 85mm f1.8G's I also have.
I've been going round and round in circles on this one myself. Tried a couple of f1.8g's and they're just not sharp wide open. f2.8 and above it's sharp as a sharp thing, but that's not why you buy fast primes. The f1.4G is supposed to be softer than the f1.8G which does not bode well. That being said I tried one in store and it looked OK on the LCD screen at 1:1. OK, not the best way to view an image but when I do this with the f1.8G I'm disappointed on the LCD let alone on a computer. And yes I fine tuned both copies I hadThe f1.4G is noticeably slower to focus though when noticeably changing subject distance. Also it has bad purple and green fringing.
The best one in terms of image quality is without doubt the Sigma art. However, sigmas don't always play nice with Nikons, even with the dock and so this puts me off. I've heard good things about the f1.4D, but it has the angular bokeh due to the aperture blades. Nikon need to pull their finger out and make a good f1.4.
Are the AF issues (slowness) over exaggerated in your opinion? I tried one and didn't think it was that bad, but that was just in store so no idea what it would be like in real world scenarios. I'd use it mainly for events such as boxing so subject distance doesn't change that much.I love my 50 f1.4 - so nerrr
Dave
Example50G1.8-0232 by Toni Ertl, on FlickrOK it's not pin sharp but it renders the OOF areas beautifully imo.A lot will depend on what you want the lens for as to whether the sharpness or lack matters. If you're using it to capture subjects that might be moving a little in low light then either D or G will be fine, because the image isn't expected to be pin-sharp and a little movement + the depth involved in shooting people adds natural blur. The place these lenses come unstuck, for me, is when I'm setting up a shot where shallow depth of field is a key part of the image and part of the subject needs to be dead sharp before smearing away OOF. The G I had showed bad chroma, CA and was soft for that kind of shot at f2.4 in the way I'd expect my Sony 50 f1.4 or Samyang 85 f1.4 to be when wide open.
Example SOOC
Example50G1.8-0232 by Toni Ertl, on Flickr
And to my amusement, that actually looks quite decent for sharpness presented like this. The dangers of pixel-peeping!
Are the AF issues (slowness) over exaggerated in your opinion? I tried one and didn't think it was that bad, but that was just in store so no idea what it would be like in real world scenarios. I'd use it mainly for events such as boxing so subject distance doesn't change that much.
Thanks for this. I think I'm just going to have to bit the bullet and buy one for myselfI've not noticed it to be slow at all, so I just tried it - focusing at a wall about 50 yards away and then to a teddy about 3ft away, and I'm sure it was way less than 1 second. Maybe I don't notice it as Brides don't move fast?
Its also plenty sharp enough for me. The DoF close up at f1.4 is so shallow as to be pointless for me, so f2 is my usual widest unless the subject is at least a few feet away
I accept that the Sigma Art is sharper, if you can get a good one and get the docking station to work too to get the focus bang on, and you don't mind it being MUCH heavier & larger and MUCH more expensive. The Nikon, like every other Nikon I have, just works. I've done a few fine tune exercises over the years and found them to be a waste of time, its MUCH more likely to be me missing focus than the camera/lens
Dave
Thanks for this. I think I'm just going to have to bit the bullet and buy one for myself![]()
It's more the extra light gathering tbh. I was at 6400 with the f1.8 so need all the light gathering I can getI have had both and used side by side and I guess it's only then you realise that the 1.8g is a fair bit quicker. I'm not exaggerating either - I have tried them together! But if you are not changing distances much there isn't much or anything in it. It's when you are going from far to near there is a clear difference. I imagine for the boxing it would be fine.
The 1.4g is meant to render slightly better but you want a super sharp 50mm wide open, then neither of these lenses are for you IMO.
There are a couple of focus speed vids on YouTube, not that they show much! Also lots of comparison reviews which most have the 1.8g as better.
But if you got that itch, you have to scratch it!!
I don't think there is a huge difference between the g's so if you don't like one I don't think you will like the other!
Just go and get the Sigma!
It's more the extra light gathering tbh. I was at 6400 with the f1.8 so need all the light gathering I can get![]()
It was pants. 12800 using the 24-70 f2.8 and has to have the shutter slower than I wanted.Damn that's some low light! The 1.4 isn't sharp at all wide open, but the extra light might help get that lower iso!
Shame like myself you do not enjoy 35mm!
It was pants. 12800 using the 24-70 f2.8 and has to have the shutter slower than I wanted.
It's not that I don't like it, I just find 50mm more useable in more scenarios.
Wifey's shoots outdoor kiddie shots professionally with a 50/1.8g on crop and it's absolutely fine. Needed some AF adjustment though.
I didn't have both side by side tbh but whenever I look at 1:1 on the LCD with the f1.8 I was always a bit 'meh', but with the f1.4 I was like "not as bad as I was expecting". Take from that what you willMine seems ok, but haven't really gone too much in depth to see if it's 100% spot on.
I did try 3 copies of the 1.4g, and although people say it's better built the first thing I did with 1 of them is go to clean some dust out and a the ring that sits just below the filter ring just fell out!
@snerkler if you could see a marked improvement on your LCD screen using the 1.4g I honestly think you must have been unlucky with the copies of the 1.8g you had? I couldn't tell any difference full size on the PC!
But as Dave pointed out, the 1.4g is 'sharp enough' wide open and I thought you were looking for a lens that's sharp sharp wide open?
I really think the Sigma is the lens for you.
I didn't have both side by side tbh but whenever I look at 1:1 on the LCD with the f1.8 I was always a bit 'meh', but with the f1.4 I was like "not as bad as I was expecting". Take from that what you will
I've no doubt the Siggy is the best, but I could get the f1.4g and 85mm f1.8g for the price of the Siggy, and they probably weigh less combined![]()
It's more the extra light gathering tbh. I was at 6400 with the f1.8 so need all the light gathering I can get![]()