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Sigma 24mm f/2 DG DN Contemporary (I-Series)

Jonathan-Mac

Well-Known Member
Joined
Apr 12, 2022
Messages
852
I just got this and haven't had much chance to use it and all of that has been close subjects rather than the landscapes or cityscapes I imagine it's also ideal for. I've done some portraits of my daughters which came out nice - f/2 is fast enough for a de-focused background and as long as you centre the subject a portrait can be nice. The f/3.5 version didn't allow me to do this.

It's very, very sharp in the centre wide open. The picture of the flower is a bit glowy and I'm not sure if it's a missed focus or a quality of focusing so close as the tomato shows no glow even at 100% and it's focused just as close.


Lilac
by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr


Green tomatoes
by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr


Fountain
by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr
 
I hadn't been planning on it but decided at the last minute to take the 24mm f/2 on my recent holiday to Venice, Montenegro and a few Greek islands. It didn't get much use off the cruise ship (except in Venice before we boarded) as I was using the 24-70mm f/2.8 Art to avoid lens changes, but I have been very, very impressed with it's performance. The speed is nice to have and photos have a vibrancy that I think the 24-70/2.8 lacks. I found it particularly useful for handheld night shots where I think I used it wide open down to 1/15s with no problems.


Sunset over the Aegean
by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr


Hands up
by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr


The band
by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr


Venice nights
by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr


Venice night
by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr


Sunset lamp
by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr


27B
by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr


Playing
by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr
 
I used this lens for my first foray into astrophotography this past weekend and it looks to me like it did a god job. The first shot is a long composite exposure, which is a feature I hadn't used before but it's perfect for this kind of shot. The second is a much shorter exposure, just thirty seconds, to avoid trails (though you can see if zooming in to 100% that all the points are elongated).

The most difficult part was focusing properly on the stars. That and cursing when a plane flew over and ruined the shot.


Startrails by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr


Stars by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr

And an owl


Owl
by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr
 
Many thanks. I'm glad I took the 24/2 on the trip though in all honesty most of what I used it for I could have done with the 20-60mm.

Here's another from the same trip.


In awe of the Kelpies
by Jonathan MacDonald, on Flickr
 
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