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"It depends on several factors what to choose. Your budget? How often you plan on using the lens? Are the pictures just for your own use? Is photography a long term hobby, not just something you're having a play with? Are you planning to upgrade your camera body in the future? For wildlife- if you plan on investing for the future, the Canon 70-200mm L lenses are your best initial bet. You have a choice of the F4L, the F4L IS (image stabilisation) or if you're looking to shoot around dusk/dawn, then the F2.8L gives you a bigger F-stop range (if your camera allows it). It can also give some nice portrait images due to the depth of field from it. There are decent ones on eBay if you choose your seller wisely with prices around £330 (F4) £500 (Is version) and £700 for the F2.8- not cheap, but always invest in good glass and look after it- it will serve you well. I have the basic F4 and it a lovely lens, I also have the wildlife and sports tog favourite, the Canon 100-400mm L. At around £600-700 second hand, you really need to love your long distance photography- but it's a hell of a good lens. There are similar length lenses not in the pro series and from different manufacturers, so look at those depending on your budget. The lenses above are EF, your camera is a crop sensor model so they have a 1.6x magnification, EF-S lenses will give you a true 1-1 magnification, but you won't be able to use them if you ever go full frame. For portraits, a fixed 50mm is lovely. Canon do an entry level F1.8 one for under a ton. Build quality isn't the best but it takes a decent image. The 24-105 F4L is another cracking EF lens (this is what I keep on my camera as the default lens), just over £300 used, the 24-70mm F2.8L is even better, but add another £200 to your budget. If you want to keep costs down, try and test out the newish STM lenses from Canon- EF-S units which come as kit lenses quite often now, so often get sold on new if people already have a lens kit of their own. " very helpful, thank you kindly. | |||
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"If you want to spend next to nothing, get the Canon 55-250 kit lens. It's cheap as chips, has IS and produces great images as long as you're not looking for a fast lens. In fact you can probably get the 18-55 and the 55-250 for less than £200 brand new, if you shop around." cheers | |||
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"Sigma lenses are pretty good for bird watching you really need a X500 lens, I have a 300 that's useless for that! " i have the 70-200 ex dg cracking lense. Sound advise i was given was always go for full frame lense incase you did uprgade to one. Tried the 2x sigma converter on sunday was alright. | |||
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"There's some great advice above on various lenses. But I think the best advice is to buy the best lens you can afford. The L series is the one to get really. The quality is better especially if you want to enlarge you images. " Yes, sorry forgot about the L bit. My portrait lens is an L and the one I'm saving up for is too. My prime is also top of the range, although it isn't an L. So my weak spot is my telephoto... but it's also the most expensive lens for me to upgrade. | |||
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"Looking for advice on updating my DSLR. I currently only have a 50mm lens and fancy a telephoto one for wildlife photography and a portrait lens, but no idea where to start. Any helpful fabbers willing to offer advice? Camera is a Canon 1100D, so not the worlds most expensive, so I don't need lenses that cost mega bucks, just something for my amateur skills. " Define 'mega bucks'. You can often pick up the 100-400 in great condition on eBay for under £700. For portraits I'd suggest something around the 70mm mark (due to the crop factor on your camera). Your 50mm is a great portrait lens on your camera already though, if a tiny bit wide. I use a 100mm f2.8 Macro for the portraits I shoot - again you can pick them up reasonably on eBay second hand. | |||
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