Jump to content

E-Mount Cameras & Lenses - Landscapes & Wildlife


StuartJLeigh
 Share

Recommended Posts

Hello, 

 

I have had my NEX-5 for the past 6 years and have loved but I am now looking to upgrade to either the 6000, 6300 and 6500. 

 

With the recent release of the 6500 there is a huge price gap from the 6000 to the 6500. Has anyone had hands on experience with both of these cameras and can let me know pro's and con's?

 

With that there seem to be a lot of newer lenses which are only compatible with the 6500 (though I am not exactly sure how accurate the Sony website is on this front as some lenses seem none compatible to any camera!). 

 

Which lenses would people recommend for the someone who loves being out and about taking shots of landscapes and nature (both from afar and as close as one can get/dares!)? 

 

Thanks, 

 

Stuart.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Coming from the NEX-5, any of the three cameras you mention will be a great step. You will enjoy the EVF, which will allow you a better way to follow your subject with normal to long lenses. The two zooms mentioned by Wedge are really the best options, mainly to keep the balance with the light body.

For camera bodies, the A6000 is great and now it is a bargain. I own two and love them. You can do a lot with it, basically the same quality still images as the newest models.

The A6300 offers improvements in video capture (4K) and better EVF. Just for that, I was not compelled to buy it.

The greatest advantage of the A6500 is the 5 axis stabilization, which I really enjoy in the A7RII (specially with A-mount and third party lenses). I think the A6500 is really worth the price (more than the 6300). I will get one as soon as it is regularly available.

Now, it depends on your budget. You may get 3 A6000's with what will cost just one A6500 (or 2 with the same for one A6300!). Two bodies is a great idea, depending on how frequently you shoot. The idealistic pair of one A6500 and one A6000 is enough for all kind of situations in the field. 

About lenses, you should have mentioned what you have for your old camera. Anyway, this is my recommendation on the wide to mid-tele range for landscape(to complement any of the long zoom suggested):

  • Don't get the kit zoom, nor the pancake wides (16mm and 20mm). They are terrible.
  • You may choose a mid-range zoom (wide to tele). The 16-70mm may be a nice one-lens complement to the long zooms suggested. I never used it, so I just follow what I've read about it in this forum and reviews.
  • The 18-105mm is another good complement or even as a solo lens (for a solo body) if you don't need long teles. I own one. It doesn't perform as a prime (though better than the pancakes!!), but the results are nice for all around use. It is cheap (actually a bargain for its features) and that may allow you to invest on some primes for specific purposes. It is a great HD video lens, I can assure.

All the zooms mentioned are OSS (optically stabilized), so the A6000 is still a good option if you don't want to spend too much.

The primes that I suggest and use:

  • One ultra wide-angle: Rokinon  12mm f/2 - manual focus, great results and low price
  • Sony Sonnar 24mm f/1.8 - good results but expensive
  • Sony 35mm f/1.8 - good results, good price
  • Sigma 19mm f/2.8 - really cheap, fair to good results (the best prime for Sony APSC on its FL range); get it just if you want to build a prime lens set; at just one stop more than the wide-tele zooms mentioned, it is almost useless as IQ is not quite different than what you get with those zooms

A good suggestion to get "as close as one can get" is the just released Sony 50mm f/2.8 Macro.

 

A final tip: save money for a good and light tripod, remote (or cable) release and first quality (nano coated) polarizing filters.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Hi!

I've just read Phillip Reevew, I mean Phillip Reeve's review on the new 50mm f/2.8 macro. Excelent review!

https://phillipreeve.net/blog/rolling-review-sony-fe-2-850-macro

From what I've read I can no longer recommend this lens because of the too short distance at 1:1, the slow autofocus, the mechanics of manual focus at macro distances and the not-rounded diafragm blades.

So, please disregard that suggestion.

Link to post
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

  • Posts

    • I'm beginning to think that I have a misconception about the a7R. The one I was wanting had the shutter release button on the hand grip with a resolution of 36mp. It appears the button moved to the handgrip on the a7R II model, which had 42mp resolution.  Sorry for any confusion, I'm in the learning stage yet.  😕 I may need to go with the basic a7 II at 24mp. The 36mp (R) model had the shutter release on the camera body (which I didn't care for).
    • I'd really like to find a package deal for an a7R (mk I, second generation) which includes the neckstrap and box. I've searched Ebay and currently no one is listing what I'm looking for. They either have the camera only or a first generation a7R and a lot of them don't offer the Sony neckstrap or box it came in. I know your site doesn't have a formal 'Equipment For Sale' thread and granted Ebay is a better place to sell gear but I thought I'd see if any of the members have one and would like to upgrade to a newer model but don't think anyone would be looking for one that old. The cameras I've been using are in the 20 megapixel range and rather than jumping to a 40mp camera due to file size, the 36mp that the first a7R has was appealing to me and wouldn't break the bank. I've been using Canon and Nikon but really want experience a Sony. If a post like this is undesirable for this website, I understand but I thought I would ask. Thank you. 
    • Here's a good thread on the issue.... https://www.dpreview.com/forums/thread/4571046 And here is the info on the A7RIVA that maybe explains why I don't see the issue...  The change in wording that caught my attention is that the new A7RIVA brochure says the structure has been "re-examined and redesigned." Don't know, but given the text of other parts of the brochures are copied word for word, the change in text here seems significant. My reading of this is that it is a redesign of the A7RIV. In that case, perhaps the 200-600 issues are less severe with the new body.
  • Topics

×
×
  • Create New...