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I'm soon to buy my first DSLR; most likely a Nikon D3300. I'm wanting to get the best lens for dim light/night trophy photos. I've been looking at the Nikkor AF-S 35mm f/1.8G DX lens and the Nikkor AF-S 50mm f/1.8G lens. Which of these will be best? Or am I completely of base with these two?

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BP

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I think 50mm 1.8 is a great lens for portraits as it's about 80mm on a 1.6x APS-C body like the 3300. Not wide enough for trophy shots in my opinion.

I think you want wide and fast (lot of photos at last light) - the 1.8 is fast, would be worried the 35 is still not wide enough.

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10generation, thanks for your input. What are your thoughts on these two:

Sigma 18-35mm f/1.8 DC HSM Lens for Nikon

Nikkor AF-S 28mm f/1.8G

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BP

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What do you mean by dim light/night trophy photos?


Great photography is not about being in the right place at the right time, it is about putting yourself in the right place at the right time.
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Dim light/night trophy photos would be pictures of me and any animal I shoot at dusk. The majority of my successful hunts end in the evening and I'm wanting better "as it lay" and "grip & grin" photos.

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BP

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the kit lens on a 3300 will not be too bad for the money. if you want to get into the primes.....it will cost you, then add a speedlight and before you know it.....you have a d800 and 5 grand wrapped up in gear. ask me how I know....lol.


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BP, don't know too much about the sigma. The good thing about a trophy pic is you can zoom with your feet as the animal is not moving. So I'd likely lean toward the nikon prime, but that is a gut vs informed opinion.

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I tend to agree with high country, the kit lens may do what you want, and a speedlight, set on fill flash, will give you a pretty natural look. A prime will make you move in or out for the zoom. Take a look at a Tamron 17-50mm f2.8, great low light capability.


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and with a wide angle, the right tilt on ones trophy, and a well set back hunter, one can make a Coues look like a monster buck.

I'd agree that a little zoom capability would do a little better in different environments and across the varied scales of targeted species. Good luck out there.


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If I wanted a decent photo in low light, I would not fool around with something like a 1.8 lens. The D3300, I think, has a flash on it. In dim light if you want a good photo, put some light of your own on it! If your somewhere you can go look at the lens you are considering, go look. A short lens becomes more portable, a plastic lens can be quite a bit lighter. If I had a camera with me just for taking trophy photo's, both those thing's appeal to me. Cost is another thing.

I haven't used a Tamron in years But the best lens I ever had was a very old Tamron 50-150 on a film camera. Tamron's 18-270 I'd take a look at. If it's short and light it only cost's $450 in the B&H catalog. An 18-200 is $199 in the same catalog. In comparison a Nikon 35 mm 1.8 is just under $600 in the same catalog. Certainly your not spending the cost of a D3300 and the lens you mentioned just to take a few trophy photo's. Unless you have the money, I'd look at the longer focal length lenses. A 35mm and 50mm lens isn't gonna give you much reach, certainly nothing like that 18-270 Tamron.I think you really should consider what else you'll use the camera for and buy a lens that is suitable for all of it.

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Hi,
The Nikon 35 or 50 1.8 lenses are excellent lenses, but you would pretty much have to be on top of the animal in order to get a close shot. The 70-300 VR lens would be a much better choice. You would be able to get the shot from a lot further away. Feel free to call me Mark at Camera Land 516-217-1000 and we can discuss your choices
Mark


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OK now I understand what you mean by trophy shots. The sigma you mentioned happens to be a spectacular lens That would be the 18-35 1.8 lens. I have the lens in stock and could give you a great price on it
Mark
516-217-1000


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Thanks for all the replies. I bought the D3300 and it came with a 18-55 lens. I also bought a 55-300 lens to go with it. I'm going to shoot many various pictures with it; using both lenses, then I'll go from there.

I can see this hobby getting very expensive... smile

Thanks,
BP

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I have the 18-105 and the 55-300. When I can afford it, I'm getting another 70-300 and selling the 55-300. Just not comfortable with the 55-300, to many non-share photo's. I have a Sigme 70-300 I use on my D70 that blows it out of the park. Think I will replace it with the Tamron version though. have read a lot of good things about it. The 55-300 is well made though other than plastic mount and lens body, they don't concern me!


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