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Most popular Zooming Lens auctions
Friday, September 03rd, 2010 | Author: TigerBiz

Most popular zooming lens eBay auctions:

NEW CANON EF100-300mm 4-5.6 USM LENS FLEX ZOOMING PCB
US $13.99
End Date: Thursday Sep-23-2010 15:06:54 PDT
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CANON 35-70EF LENS FLEX, ZOOMING EF35-70MM MIB OEM LOOK
US $25.00
End Date: Friday Sep-24-2010 17:17:42 PDT
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GSI Super Quality Detachable Wide Angle Lens for the iPhone 3G-3GS, Turn your iPhone into a High-End Camera!

  • Amazing New Product Adds a Whole New Dimension to your Iphone!
  • Superb 0.68 Magnification Gains 30% More Visibility Range
  • Special Protection Back-door and Case, Attach Lens Only when Needed
  • Includes Carrying Velvet Pouch and Special Cleaning Cloth

Outfit your Beloved iPhone with this new Quality Lens from GSI, and watch your iPhone develop into this Super Camera! Simply attach the Lens to the Backdoor Included, and the iPhone will take Crystal Clear Pictures from your Favorite People or Moments. Affordable and Extremely User Friendly, this is ideal for any iPhone User.

Rating: (out of 1 reviews)

List Price: $ 39.99

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TV1000 4GB QuadBand Zooming Lens TV Dual SIM CELL PHONE
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End Date: Wednesday Sep-22-2010 15:37:29 PDT
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T1000i Quad-Band Zooming Lens TV Dual SIM CELL PHONE FM
US $101.88
End Date: Thursday Sep-23-2010 5:28:54 PDT
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Honeywell HD70, 1/3-in CCD Day/Night Super Hi-Res Vandal-Resistant Dome, 550TVL, 24 LEDs, Fixed 4.0mm Lens, 12VDC, NTSC

The HD70 is a day/night camera that switches from color to black and white mode depending upon available light. The HD70 incorporates a 1/3-in CCD that offers 550 TV lines of crisp, clear horizontal resolution.

Price:

The Singles Collection

No Description Available
Track: 10: Stereotype,Track: 11: Ghost Town – (12″ version),Track: 12: Why?,Track: 13: Friday Night, Saturday Morning,Track: 14: Racist Friend – (with The Special AKA),Track: 15: Free Nelson Mandela – (with The Special AKA),Track: 1: Gangsters – (with The Special AKA),Track: 2: Rudi, A Message To You,Track: 3: Nite Club,Track: 4: Too Much Too Young (live) – (with The Special AKA),Track: 5: Guns Of Navarone (live) – (with The Special AKA),Track: 6: Rat Race,Track: 7: R

Rating: (out of 16 reviews)

List Price: $ 12.98

Price: $ 4.76

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Telephoto Zoom Lens Review
Saturday, August 28th, 2010 | Author: TigerBiz

These are some longer range manual focus telephoto zoom lenses that can be used with interchangeable lens cameras.

Category: Lens  | Tags: , , ,  | 9 Comments

How To Use The Digital Camera Or Camcorders Zoom Lens

Camcorders and cameras also have a zoom lens, but the biggest difference is that the camera can zoom in shooting at the same time doing the action, changing the size of the viewfinder screen. For example, intend to take the distance to a goal, you can use the zoom viewfinder pushed recently, when pushed to the screen size you want before pressing the video button, the screen you want intake. Like the same way as a fixed camera shot. Then, while filming the action to do what the zoom is only appropriate time to use it? ?
If you would like to express a piece of the location of items or characters, such as: Feature a candle is about 3 seconds, then slowly pull the lens away, the screen sooner or later, used to be a candle-studded cake. This action so that the Digital Photo Frame is more lively and interesting. No narration and description, you can change the screen to see the photographer in Table A to be the content and meaning, which is the so-called “lens language.” If you zoom past the other hand to push the shot is intended to explain specific goals or figures, such as: the screen started a group of children performing dance panorama, a few seconds later the screen gradually pushed closer to one of the child’s half-length King, and then the lens on the followed him. This shooting method as in to tell you that this child is my son, is intended to guide the viewer what you shoot.
More than these two commonly used method of making meaningful use of appropriate, then the effect with a touch to the picture. On the contrary the talking, the image of a scattershot headless flies flying around the lens.12.1″ Digital Photo Frame Abuse of zoom lens, the screen suddenly shot past suddenly much repetition, which is often guilty of many current V8 family taboo, remember to push or pull away in recent shooting action, so every time after the pause, or a picture from another angle, the re – start shooting. From now on, try to change the shooting mode to enjoy shooting fun, enjoy the shooting results.

http://www.global-e-world.com/Digital-Photo-Frame/12.1-inch-Digital-Photo-Frame.php

12.1″ Digital Photo Frame

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How To Choose The Right Digital SLR And Lens Cameras
Friday, August 20th, 2010 | Author: TigerBiz

How To Choose The Right Digital SLR And Lens Cameras

Choosing the Right Digital SLR for Your Nature Photography

It is very true that it doesn’t matter what equipment you use — it’s what you do with the camera that matters. However, there is no question that when you’re hiking through a thick jungle in the middle of central america you want to pack light. Even though the Nikon D2x has the prestige of being Nikon’s premier “PRO” camera, you may not find it’s the best fit for your nature work.

One of the first things you need to consider is how you’re going to use the pictures. Look up the magazines you want to publish your work. Send in for “submission guidelines” and find out their minimum mega pixel count. The same is true for stock agencies — browse around and decide which place you’d ultimately like to sell your work. Many organizations have their submission guideliens published on their websites. If you’re more interested in learning and doing nature photography for your own pleasure then by all means buy the less expensive models. There’s nothing wrong with a camera that takes a 5 or 6 megapixel image. You’ll still be able to blow it up to poster size if you want a special print made.


Choosing the Right Lenses

Unfortunately, no one can tell you which lenses to buy or “how to build the perfect SLR system for nature photography.” Again, it depends on the kinds of photos you like to take, your personal preference and the market where you want to sell your image.

The great advantage of Nikon cameras is that you can use older lenses on your body. This allows a lot more freedom of choice and means you can get really amazing older lenses at shockingly affordable prices.

I’ll give you an example. One of my favorite lenses is a 300mm f4 manual focus prime lens from the 1970s. Nikon especially developed ED (Extra-low Dispersion) glass to provide pricise optical colour correction. This special glass (not available in all Nikon lenses) provides the sharp, clear resolution required for superb photographs. The other advantage (at least for me since I generally hike to find wildlife) is that it weighs less and packs small.

Another example — the 50mm 1.4 auto focus). It’s actually an 80mm on your body. That means you have a prime lens at 80mm that can take pictures in the darkest settings. And, because Nikon lenses has been perfecting its 50mm lenses since its inception as a company (Nikon used to include a 50mm on all its bodies until well into the late 1980s), it’s one of Nikon’s very best lenses. It’s cheap because 50mm on a 35mm camera is kind of pooey. But 80mm on a digial camera is marvelous.

Magnification – Use it to your Advantage

For wildlife photographers in particular, the one advantage of shooting with any Nikon digital camera these days is the magnification factor. Rather than create a sensor the same size as one frame of 35mm film, Nikon and most other digital SLR camera manufacturers decided to create a sensor that is smaller than the 24x36mm standard frame of the older film models. Having a smaller sensor means you aren’t going to capture all the information on the left and right and top and bottom of the frame. This may sound really bad… but there is no need to worry about what you haven’t captured because the viewfinder has been adjusted so that what you see optically is what is captured in the digital file.

The result is that the camera multiplies the magnification of all the lenses. Nikon’s magnification (depending on the camera you use) is around 1.5x. That means a 300mm lens is now magnified to 450mm. This is great news for wildlife photographers. The only drawback is that wider angle lenses (like a 17mm wide angle becomes a 25.5mm not-as-wide-angle lens. However, landscape photographers still have some options. I’ll get to those in a bit.

Lenses – Pros and Cons

While I can’t tell you the right lenses to buy for your particualr needs… I can give you some feedback/impressions about the particular lenses I am using or have used in the past.

Nikkor 10.5mm f2.8 Fisheye: I never thought such a specialized lens could provide me with so much use. For more information, I’ve written a short article about how to use a fisheye lens in your nature photography athttp://www.naturestocklibrary.com/gallery/2472892

Nikkor 18-70mm f/3.5-4.5G ED-IF AF-S DX Zoom – This lens is all right. I bought it as a kit lens a long time ago and it’s served well for the wider range. I wish I had saved pennies and purchased a 2.8 that offered a wider range (like a 12mm to 25mm).

Tamron 17-35mm f2.8: This is a great lens but, alas, I purchased it for a film camera and the magnification on my digital body means that it isn’t that useful in my photography right now. I’m planning on selling it (along with my other wide angle) and buying a 2.8 that has a wider range so I can do more with landscape photography.

Nikkor 50mm f/1.4D AF – This is the same lens I discussed earlier. It’s small, has a low price tag, allows you to shoot in really dark situations and it’s an 80mm on a digital camera. You really can’t go wrong.

Nikkor Nikon 80-200mm f2.8D ED AF Zoom – This is a fantastic lens that stays at 2.8 no matter if you are shooting at 80 or 200mm. Again, magnification means it’s actually a 300mm zoom. Zooms are great because you can adjust your focus distance depending on where your subject is located. Not so great with subjects that are always far away (like the macaws seen here), but really awesome for docile wildlife like deer. It also has a macro function that works beautifully.

Nikkor 105mm f/2.8D AF Micro, or 105 Micro for short – This is probably Nikon’s most used macro lens, probably because the lens can serve triple duty. First of all, it is a macro photography lens and it allows you to take photographs at a 1:1 reproduction ratio (on a 35mm body), which means that a 24 by 36 mm subject will fill the entire frame. Second, it makes a very good general purpose short telephoto lens. Third, it is also at least a very reasonable portrait lens (although, with magnification it may be too much of a telephoto on a digital SLR). I really love this lens for macro photography.

Nikkor 300mm f4 manual focus – While a “prime” lens doesn’t offer the flexibilty of a zoom… it’s still an ideal choice for getting the best results in your work. This is the same lens I discussed earlier and, considering it cost only 0, it’s light & the focusing is so smooth, it’s one of my favorite lenses. I never leave home without it.

Nikkor 600mm f5.6 manual focus ED Glass – Again, I paid a lot less for this lens (which is actually a hefty 900mm on a digital body and also has the famous Nikon ED glass!!) because it’s an older model and it’s manual focus. I spent ,599 USD – but consider that a newer model would go for at least ,000 to ,000, depending on the f stop. Some may argue that 5.6 is a bit too narrow of an f stop but I find the compression with telephoto lenses means that I wouldn’t want to shoot a 900mm subject with anything wider than 5.6 (2.8 would make the focus far too shallow on such a far away subject). Although… for closer subjects 2.8 is magic!

In the past, I have also used the Sigma 70-300mm 3.5-5.6 and the Tamron 200-400mm 3.5-5.6 and both served well as affordable zooms while I was learning about photography. I have since sold them to pay for the lenses I currently use.

Why I LOVE and Highly Recommend Manual Focus

I used to be terrified of focusing manually. On most auto focus lenses, the focus ring is small and more difficult to use… also there’s something really easy about just allowing your camera to do the focusing work for you. I was afraid I couldn’t react quickly enough to moving subjects and that I wouldn’t be as good as my camera’s auto focus. Now I see the errors of my ways.

For wildlife (or people), you want to make sure the main subject’s eyes are in perfect focus. You won’t be able to sell any image if the eyes aren’t in focus. If you shoot a subject 10 feet away at 2.8 and use auto focus, the camera will choose the object closer to the camera (usually the nose, cheek, or eye brow… not the eye itself). A 2.8 aperture means that you will have such a soft depth of field that the eyes will appear out of focus. The older (and more affordable) manual focus lenses have the most beautiful focusing rings you’ve ever seen. I find it much easier to use manual focus on my 300mm f4 lens from the 1970s than my newer autofocus 80-200mm zoom (using the auto focus feature). Unfortuately, I find the focusing ring on the newer models a little bit pooey… but I did want to make the case for why I think manual focus lenses from the 1970s are the greatest things since sliced bread!


Rule of Thumb for Fast Subjects

You may already be aware that your shutter speed should be at least the same as the distance of your lens. For instance, you need to shoot at least 1/300th of a second if you are using a 300mm lens or hand shake will make your picture look really blurry. And anything larger than 300mm should be put on a tripod (preferably one with a ball head for wildlife work). With magnification, you may be able to get away with shooting a 300mm (a 450mm on your digital) hand-held… at 1/450th of a second or higher…)in a pinch… but investing in a good ball head tripod will really improve your results if your lens is higher than 300mm.

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Determining The Best Digital Video Camera Zoom Lens
Friday, August 13th, 2010 | Author: TigerBiz

Determining The Best Digital Video Camera Zoom Lens

Okay, so you finally decided to get that digital video camera you’ve been saving for. You have enough money to buy a kick-butt video camera. But have you considered the most vital part for the camera? The part that comes into play with every video shot. The digital video camera zoom lens. Without a proper digital video camera zoom lens, your prized video camera isn’t all it could be. You would be much better off if you spend equal amounts on the camera and the digital video camera zoom lens. The lens is that important. Your choice of lenses can distinguish between a good camera and an outstanding camera.

Spend More On The Lens

The digital video camera zoom lens determines how well your videos turn out. It, more than anything else on or in the camera affects the end products. Think about it, every shot you take goes through that lens. Really the camera is just a case for the mechanisms inside. You could make a case for reversing the spending, more on the lens and less on the actual camera. Most digital video cameras don’t come with the ability to change lenses. This fact makes it more important to purchase the best digital video camera zoom lens possible. Another piece of advice regarding the lens is too not purchase the plastic lenses. The clarity is much better from glass digital video camera zoom lens.

If you do plan on purchasing a video camera where you can change the digital video camera zoom lens then compare the options of each lens to find the one that you want. Experts recommend that you purchase brand names such as Canon, Pentax or Nikon. Be sure to check if the lens will work for your camera. Digital video camera zoom lenses are not created equal and a lens from Nikon may or may not work with a digital video camera made by Canon.

If you are a professional photographer, then you should check out Leica, Carl Zeiss and Leupold. These are specialty lens manufacturers. The quality of the videos will show if you use one of their digital video camera zoom lens. If you are just a beginner then these lenses may not be the best place to start, because of the cost. But if you want extraordinary quality, these digital video camera zoom lenses are the way to go.

Options for digital video camera zoom lenses include normal, wide angle and telephoto. The focal length of the lens has a lot to do with the type of digital video camera zoom lens choice. The quality of the lens is also determined by lens speed, a significant factor in your shoot quality. You should think about focusing distance as well as advanced features such as vibration reduction, USM or ultrasonic motor and filter thread which should be present in any good digital video camera zoom lens.
Before you make that digital video camera zoom lens purchase you should research each feature that you want and choose the lens that fulfils those wishes the best. As a rule of thumb, the more expensive lenses are usually the better choice since more of the elements in the lens with be glass, although this does increase the camera weight. In the end if you do the research and take into consideration your shooting needs and budget, you will make the right choice

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Photography – Choosing the Right Lens
Thursday, August 12th, 2010 | Author: TigerBiz

Photography – Choosing the Right Lens

Slowly, but surely, the worth of the fixed focal length lens (or prime lens) to the non-professional photographer is being eroded by the increasing perfection of zoom lens technology. The days when you packed your camera bag with trusty 28mm, 50mm, 85mm, 105mm, and even 180mm lenses are rapidly disappearing. Why bother when you can simply reach for something like Nikon’s all-purpose Nikkor 18-200mm DX VR zoom lens and know that you have both flexibility and optical speed at your fingertips?

The truth is that, while the range of focal lengths may be increasing within a single zoom lens, no all-purpose lens is ever likely to perform at the level of eqivalent prime lenses for its full range of focal lengths.

Zooms are engineered with a good deal more glass than is found in a prime lens, and because of this they “swallow” more light than the corresponding lens of the same focal length. Unless you are photographing under very bright light, the required increased shutter duration time of a zoom may make the difference between a good image, and one that is ruined by camera lens wobble.

Even so, there is a lot to be said for carrying one lens, and leaving it attached to your camera, rather than carrying five separate lenses and having to miss photo opportunities that arise while you are changing lenses.

But thinking about fixed focal length lenses can be instructive. When we plunge into photography with a zoom lens, the effortless continuum of focal lengths is apt to blur the distinction between photographs captured at different focal lengths. Historically this just wasn’t a problem. Economy demanded that the lenses you purchased were quite distinct, focal length wise, and so an appreciation of their individual characteristics came easy.

50mm
It used to be the case that the kit lens for a 35mm SLR was generally a 50mm focal length lens. The 50mm lens reproduces a field of view that approximates normal vision, with an angle of coverage of around 50 degrees. But this is also partly the reason that the 50mm lens gets only a fraction of the respect it deserves. Because when we look at the scene captured by a 50mm image, we are not going to see something that we could not have seen with our own eyes. This means there are no optical effects to draw us into the image, so the subject material must be strong enough to command our attention.

Despite the fact that the 50mm kit lens has been replaced with an optical zoom lens (usually in the range of 28-80mm these days) the 50mm lens has a lot going for it. For one thing it’s generally very fast. My 50mm kit lens (picked up decades ago) is an f/1.4 Nikkor. By dialing up to the largest aperture you can get away with not using a flash when taking indoor photographs in natural lighting. This means that your shots will look more natural, and have a depth to them that washed-out images captured with flash simply cannot match. You’ll also be able to shoot fast. The equivalent focal length on a zoom might be two, or even three, stops slower.

If you will be using your camera mostly to record family shots, and you will be shooting indoors a good fraction of the time, you might want to take a serious look at picking up a 50mm f/1.8, or even an f/1.4 if you have the money to spend. To read a fine essay on the under-appreciation of the 50mm lens, I recommend The Forgotten Lens by Gary Voth.

28mm
Open up a book on photojournalism and you’ll discover a slew of images captured with wide angle lenses like the 28mm prime lens. Wide angle prime lenses have a remarkable pronounced curvature on the front lens element which helps to pull in light from all around the edges of a scene. This has two main consequences.

The first is that a much larger portion of the scene before you is captured. Extremely short focal length primes, like the 8mm, are known as fisheye lenses because the angle of coverage exceeds 180 degrees. Everything in front of the camera ends up in the image!

The second consequence is that cramming more of the scene into the image distorts the image to some degree. Straight lines in the real world, like the horizon and the edges of walls, become curved. Most of the time this is acceptable, because capturing the entire scene is the most important consideration.

Using a wide angle prime like the 28mm becomes necessary when you try to capture images in confined spaces. To shoot all of the board members in the annual meeting while they sit at the conference table, and to get all of the table plus the room around it into focus, requires a wide angle lens. The other situation that calls for a wide angle arises when you find yourself trying to photograph a very large object that won’t quite fit into the frame. If you were taking a picture of someone standing at the base of the Eiffel Tower, using a wide angle will help you fill the frame with both the subject and the tower.

85mm to 105mm
I have mentioned how useful the 50mm prime lens is for doing portraiture. However, the lens most often mentioned in connection with portrait shots is the 85mm prime, usually with an f/1.8 maximum aperture, or the even faster f/1.2

The 85mm is sometimes referred to as a short telephoto. Unless your aim is to capture just the upper torso of your subject, or simply their face when closer in, you will need to back off to capture your subject from head to foot. This means that you can often take unobtrusive and spontaneous portrait shots simply by being in the vicinity of your subject as they go about their activities.

But the real strength of the 85mm, or even the 105mm, prime, lies with the ability of the lens to get in tight and emphasize the features of the subject’s face. The background in these shots is not the least important, and by opening up to the maximum aperture you will be able to throw the background completely out of focus. Focusing becomes critical in this situation, so concentrate on the subject’s eyes which can never be unsharp in acceptable portraiture shots.

180mm
There will always be times when you cannot get close to the scene that you want to photograph. This is where telephoto lenses come in handy. Medium telephoto range like that provided by the 180mm prime is useful for photographing local sports events, where you can approach the edge of the field.

Prime telephotos capture only a small portion of the scene before you, so in order to pull in enough light that you can see the scene properly, the size of the lens has to grow. In other words, your 180mm lens is going to weigh you down a little. For this reason, even if you are photographing at maximum aperture, it is a good idea to use a monopod to steady your shot. Hand holding a telephoto quickly becomes not only a chore, but a great way to lessen the likelihood of a sharp image. This is where the addition of vibration reduction technology to the lens (or image stabilization, as it is also known), can be very advantageous (but extremely costly for telephotos).

Like the short telephotos discussed already, focusing becomes even more critical here. Unless your subject remains relatively still, or your lens is capable of rapid auto focusing, some real amount of practice is required before you can consistently shoot great action shots with a telephoto. On the other hand, the results are worth it.

So to wrap up, I have summarized the characteristics and uses of several different focal length lenses. Try to keep these characteristics in mind if you are shooting with a zoom that covers some, or all, of the focal lengths discussed here. If you think about your shots in terms of these different focal length characteristics you’ll be better able to harness them to improve your photography.

To help you select a suitable digital camera to get started with, I have put together an article for you about how to find the right Beginner Digital Camera.

Whether you need a simple point-and-shoot model, or a more complex digital SLR model, you will find the answers, and greatly discounted digital camera offers, at http://www.bestdigitalcameradiscounts.com/

Stephen Carter is a web developer and creator of the review site application Review Foundry. He is also the creator of Best Digital Camera Discounts His interest in photography spans decades.

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Sony Ericsson Satio (Idou) 8x optical zoom lens
Thursday, August 12th, 2010 | Author: TigerBiz

So yeah. I found an optical zoom lens for sony ericsson satio (actually, it’s not just for satio…you can use it for any mobile, or digicam). I bought it for £12.00. It;s quite cheap! The lens, I would say, is quite good. However, the tripod is rubbish.
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Canon EOS 50D 15.1MP Digital SLR Camera with EF 28 135mm f 3.5 5.6 IS USM Standard Zoom Lens 8GB Deluxe Accessory Kit

 

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Even after the 50D still impressed me. I moved to the PowerShot S5 IS with the 50D just before my grandson was born. I wanted to start taking photography more seriously. This is a very nice and reasonable package, because it contains everything you need to begin recording immediately, ie a nice-sized memory card, batteries, tripod and bag. Kit lens is a nice zoom range, but I was pleased with him and quickly replaces it with Tamron 18-270 mm, Sigma 50mm f/1.4 (my favorite). 50D is a versatile and very flexible, giving the seemingly endless opportunities to learn to make better digital images and full skills. It is a good act, capable of shooting 6.3 frames per second, it is fast and good focus in low light, which is capable of ISO 12800, and the Live View mode, using the rear LCD as the “discoverer”, it is possible to test different settings, white balance, or temperature, or to bring a sharper focus on the details, but the pictures taken. Is there really much that can be said in favor of 50D, can be written here. I found a reference to the practical: “Canon EOS 50D Digital Field Guide” Charlotte K. Lowrie. Of course, the 50D has produced large, clear pictures, but because the winner of the flexibility of demand a certain amount of knowledge and skills … and that the problem is that we always interest in photography.

 

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