Why use a 200mm lens




















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How to Create Portraits with a Black Background. Dragging the Shutter for Creative Portraits. How to do Tilt-Shift Portraits. Copper, Prisms, and Orbs, Oh My! How to Edit Corporate Headshots in Lightroom. If you ask me, sacrificing a bit of sharpness is worth it not to have to constantly swap out lenses. But why is it such a good lens? In another post, I offered up a few ways to improve your landscapes with a telephoto lens. One of the benefits I discussed in that article is that with a telephoto lens, you can more easily isolate subjects in the larger landscape and focus on smaller details.

The benefit of that is that you have a greater variability of the shots you take. Zoom in for those detail shots and then zoom out to see the larger scene. The focal length is great for getting close-ups of subjects without being right in their face, while also allowing you to zoom out and create environmental or documentary portraits with excellent clarity.

The compression of the mm lens can also be quite pleasing as well, helping to reduce the appearing of larger features, such as the nose. The length sometimes also allows for the inclusion of a tripod collar. This keeps the lens balanced when working with a tripod — and it also lowers the stress on the bayonet mount between the camera and lens.

A larger lens also lends itself to comfortable handholding. The wider barrel fits well in the hand, with the weight of the lens counterbalancing the camera body. And modern versions of the mm lens include image stabilization VR, IS, and OS , which further improves sharpness when shooting handheld and also prevents camera shake problems caused by such a large body. Note that optical stabilization systems help to reduce camera shake by several stops, so you can still work handheld with sharp results even when the light gets low.

Therefore, you can expect tank-like construction. These lenses are built to last, even when abused day in and day out. A mm lens, when paired with a 1.

Some professionals will do this to achieve a very dramatic effect and a maximal blurring of the background. Improve this answer. AndyT 11 11 bronze badges. Naseer Naseer 1, 1 1 gold badge 14 14 silver badges 16 16 bronze badges. Compress the image? Objects won't appear closer together, they'll be bigger, or rather, zoomed in. Nick: By compress objects , he means the background.

Telephoto focal lengths have the effect of bringing things in depth "closer" to the key subject. Its called background compression, and is due to the narrower field of view. Sorry about the terminology, thanks jrista for the clarification! I think the concept of background compression is an important one. I did not know of that particular term myself, although I did know of the effect.

I think its a sadly undervalued capability of telephoto lengths and the same goes for background decompression wide angles and I've been glad to see several answers recently discussing it. So thanks! Image compression works at the subject level as well. It's not that the lens distorts anything, but that you are further from your subject for a given magnification, so the difference in distance between your camera and the subject's nose and eyes for example is proportionally much less than if you'd shot the same subject from much closer using a shorter lens.

That's why teles are used in tight portraiture and beauty -- you shoot from where the subject looks best and use the lens rather than your feet to fill the frame.

Here is another example at 80mm: Reference: Capella by Andy Mumford This photographer has written a great article about the value of telephoto lenses in landscape at ND Magazine.

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