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Salvo por que el autofoco no funciona con la Nikon D60, es una maravilla, muy luminoso y liviano.La limitación del autofoco no es problema para macro, ya que usualmente se debe utilizar foco selectivo.Muy buen lente para retrato por su caracter de 105mm
Which is not true. I have had this lens for more than a year so I know all the Pros and Cons; I did not just buy it and I am not writing a spur of the moment review. I am not saying this one in better than the Nikon because I haven't used the Nikon, but I don't imagine it is $350 better.Now there are reviews that complain about the auto-focusing on this lens. Also a one person said to go to Manual Focus you have to flip the switch on the camera, one the lens, and move the focusing ring. Also it fits the Nikon but doesn't lock in the camera body as easy or smoothly, again it still fits and works fine.I personally love my sigma lens and will definitely buy my next lens through Sigma. It is a Macro lens meaning its field of focus is very small at 2.8 so it will tend to go back and forth at times, especially if there is a lot of things in the viewfinder.
Which locks the camera in full minimum focus ratio, meaning it will focus closer up, or you can limit it.I personally don't like the lens hood because it screws on, instead of twist and lock, which also means you can't put a filter on the lens directly while using the lens hood. If you are debating between this lens and the Nikon one, I would go with this one. The switch on the lens is a focus limiting switch. If you know how to use a DSLR then should be able to Manual Focus it. When shooting portrait style photos I have no problem with the autofocus, now with nature it doesn't always want to focus perfectly no, but like I said above it is a Macro lens and focuses very tight. Instead you have to put the filter on the hood itself.
Most likely will be the 50mm Macro.
I won't lie. They immediately looked awesome, thats without modifying any settings. I suppose the one thing I will say is that when you auto focus it is a bit noisy, but I was alone in my room with no noise at midnight. So I read around and a lot of people said this was a very solid lens to go with. and honestly even if it is, is that really a reason to not by an otherwise quality lens. More importantly, though, I spent hours looking at photos taken with this lens on the exact body that I use. I know nothing about macro photography other than I want to learn how to do it and do it well. I'm sure I have no idea what I'm doing and yet I took some photos that look sweet.
I liked what I saw, the price was reasonable, so I went with it. When it came I didn't even read any of the fine literature that comes with it, I just put it on and started shooting pepsi cans, keyboards, and creepy collections of Hummels my mom has. Under any other circumstances I am confident it will not be noticable. (the answer is no).get this nao.
From life-size close-up to infinity, from 35mm to digital, this lens provides superb, sharp and distortion free images. I would highly recommend this lens to be added to your camera bag. It delivers clear crisp images at normal focusing ranges while providing high image quality. And at life sized magnifications, you receive a realistic impression of your subjects.
I was very pleased at first with this lens,however after about a month I have found myself becoming Very frustrated with the slow,noisy, and sometime non-existent auto-focus ability and the extremely "touchy" manual focus mode means that you better not be in a hurry to get your shot because you're gonna be fidgeting for awhile trying to get the focus indicator to light up. on a Sony A300 anyway. I have 2 other Sigma lenes, a 28mm and a 70-300mm, and couldn't be happier with their performance,I suppose this is why I feel somewhat disappointed with this one.
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