Kit Lenses Atlanta GA

This page provides relevant content and local businesses that can help with your search for information on Kit Lenses. You will find informative articles about Kit Lenses, including "Beyond the Kit Lens". Below you will also find local businesses that may provide the products or services you are looking for. Please scroll down to find the local resources in Atlanta, GA that can help answer your questions about Kit Lenses.

Aerial Photography
(404)815-0300
1075 Peachtree Walk Northeast
Atlanta, GA
Conway Atlanta Photography
(404)875-3213
1184 14th Place Northeast
Atlanta, GA
Riggall Michael Photography
(404)872-8242
403 8th Street Northeast
Atlanta, GA
CLIF Sparkman Photography
(404)659-0200
161 Mangum Street Southwest Apt 301
Atlanta, GA
Slater Greg Photography
(404)584-6397
141 Mangum St Sw
Atlanta, GA
Foster & Associates Photographers
(404)892-3533
1012 Piedmont Av NE
Atlanta, GA
Moakler Photographic Services Inc
(404)874-3749
1468 Mecaslin St Nw
Atlanta, GA
Marchant Larry Photography and Video Productions
(404)872-7833
65 10th Street Northeast
Atlanta, GA
Lockwood Calvin Photography Inc
(404)221-0201
211 Peters Street Southwest
Atlanta, GA
Wilkerson Tim Photography
(404)724-9683
933 Watkins Street Northwest Suite B
Atlanta, GA

Beyond the Kit Lens

Beyond The Kit Lens

Take full advantage of your SLR investment by adding lenses to your system


Buying a digital SLR as part of a kit that includes a lens is a popular option, especially for those moving up from a compact camera or switching brands. Usually for just a small increase in price, you get the camera body with a zoom lens—enough to get you started. It probably won’t be long before you start looking at other lenses, though, either as a replacement for the kit lens or as additions to your arsenal.

Why A Kit Lens Is Just A Starter
In general, lenses included as part of a kit have lower-end construction and optics. The cost savings need to come from somewhere, and that usually means plastic mounts and less expensive coatings on the optics. You’ll also find that many kit lenses don’t have the more durable construction typical of a similar higher-end lens. But it’s an excellent way for you to get up to speed with your camera, and for casual use, it may be the only lens you need at first.

What You Can Expect From A Kit Lens

Let’s look at the popular Canon and Nikon kit lenses. Canon includes an EF-S 18-55mm ƒ/3.5-5.6 IS (Image Stabilizer) with its EOS Rebel series of cameras. By itself, this lens sells for about $160. Purchased as part of a kit with the body, the price drops to less than $100. On
the Nikon side, the AF-S DX 18-55mm ƒ/3.5-5.6 VR (Vibration Reduction) zoom sells for about $185 on its own, but only adds $120 to the price of a D5000.

Both lenses cover the same range, with a 35mm-equivalent focal range of about 27-82mm, and feature the same variable aperture settings of ƒ/3.5 at the wide end and ƒ/5.6 at 55mm. Both lenses include the manufacturers’ versions of image stabilization, and both are optimized for the smaller sensor sizes of the typical digital SLR.

Balancing Cost And Performance
The whole reason behind the kit approach is to get you into a camera that you can use immediately and at a set price. The lenses included with many kits are entry level in an effort to keep the costs to a minimum. They’ll usually cover the “normal” range of shooting, from moderate wide to moderate tele, in part because these lenses are easier and less expensive to manufacture and in part to encourage you to buy additional lenses when you want to go wider or longer.

While pro-quality lenses are often made from metal components, the average kit lens will have a plastic body, making them a little less durable, but much lighter in weight. Top-of-the-line lenses, like the L series from Canon, also include expensive coatings and glass elements, along with more robust focusing systems.

Finally, you’ll notice that high-end lenses tend to be larger than the typical kit lens. This is because they’re faster—often with a constant maximum aperture of ƒ/2.8 or even faster, rather than the variable ƒ/3.5-5.6—which requires larger optical elements. This lets you shoot in lower light ...

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