Photographer
Dennys Arias
Posts: 6
Elizabeth, New Jersey, US
So I'm looking to upgrade but I'm on a budget of 5k give or take. I plan to upgrade to Full Frame, and have no L Lenses. The camera would be for video & landscape along with some portrait work. If you were in my shoes what would you get? 7D, 6D, or 5D 24-70, 70-200, 16-35, or 17-40?
Photographer
Wilde One
Posts: 2373
Santa Monica, California, US
6D and the 17-40 would be a nice combo for landscape.
Photographer
photoguy35
Posts: 1040
Goodyear, Arizona, US
My suggestions: 6D: $1900 17-40: $700 50: (f1.8 @ $110 or f1.4 @ $340) 85 f1.8: $370 70-200: ($2100, $1150, $1050, or $650 depending on f2.8 or 4, IS or no IS) Depending on your video needs and personal taste, also consider the 35 f2 ($280), 28 f1.8 ($440), or the stabilized 24 f2.8 IS ($650) or 28 f2.8 IS ($750).
Photographer
MarcMarayag
Posts: 77
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
get a 5dmkiii with a 24-105L that's my opinion more versatile with your needs
Photographer
Jayc Yu
Posts: 533
Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada
Buy everything used to save money. Since you already have the funds, buy the best product line. In the case of camera, get a full frame sensor: 5D II or 6D I recommend a prime lens to get out-of-focus effect, when shooting close-up portrait and outdoor videos. 50mm f/1.2L The problem with the 85mm f/1.2L is it loses a lot of wide-angle effect compared to a 35mm and 50mm. Shot with a Nikkor 50 f/1.2 plus Canon 5DII on my $100 DIY shoulder rig: http://youtu.be/12-y6MuDYNQ
Photographer
o k u t a k e
Posts: 4660
New York, New York, US
6D + 85 f1.2L + 17-40 f4L + 50 f1.4 This will give you the full range from portrait to landscape. 85L will give you the shallow DOF and ultra dreamy bokeh for your portraits 17-40L will do the job for your landscapes that will probably be shot at f8-f11. 50 will be a good all around lens for full length shots and video. You could also swap the 85L for a 70-200. Both are excellent lenses. The 70-200 will give you the full range from portrait to tight headshot, but I'd go for the 85 since I couldn't give up the bokeh and speed.
Photographer
Solas
Posts: 10390
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
5D and 17-40 and 24-70. Spend the rest on a kick ass tripod head, and filters. Forget the other lenses. May supplement both of the above lenses for the 16-35 (try to find the mark I, it's cheaper and you'd likely not see the difference..hell I can barely tell the difference).
Photographer
sunn fotography
Posts: 278
Hong Kong, Hong Kong, China
5d3 + 24-70 f4 L + 16-35L + 50 f 1.4 + 70-200 !!
Photographer
Jay Leavitt
Posts: 6745
Las Vegas, Nevada, US
Dennys Arias wrote: The camera would be for video & landscape along with some portrait work. 5DII 17-40L 50 1.4 100 f2 200 2.8L The 5DII is a fantastic camera for the uses you mention. the 17-40 range doesn't benefit as much from shallow DOF / wide apertures as the 50mm+ crowd does. 50/100/200 primes do very well in portraits, and all four lenses give a great variety for video. Spend the other $2,000 on lighting, audio, movement, etc - maybe even a T2i and Tamron 17-50 2.8 VC for a B-cam with a great stabilized range - a t2i with a 4 stop IS'd 28-75 2.8 (equivalent) lens coupled with a steadicam makes for a GREAT combo.
Photographer
Pelle Piano
Posts: 2312
Stockholm, Stockholm, Sweden
[edit]Sorry, misread the budget.
Photographer
Wilde One
Posts: 2373
Santa Monica, California, US
Dennys Arias wrote: So I'm looking to upgrade but I'm on a budget of 5k give or take. I plan to upgrade to Full Frame, and have no L Lenses. The camera would be for video & landscape along with some portrait work. If you were in my shoes what would you get? 7D, 6D, or 5D 24-70, 70-200, 16-35, or 17-40? Just saw your budget was actually quite good. 5D III is a great camera. Check the features if you want it or are OK with the 6D. The 5D probably has the better viewfinder - something you should never underestimate. For landscape the 24-105 would probably not ideal. The 17-40 would probably be the better option. But if you want to keep your options open, e.g. to shoot portrait, the 24-105/4L IS USM is so well-priced in the kit it's not a mistake to buy it. Then I'd wait and shoot and see if you'd rather have an extreme wide angle - or money for shooting. I think Canon just came out with a 8-15 mm lens. Could be nice for landscape if you're into extreme wide angles.
Photographer
365 Digitals Exposed
Posts: 807
Perris, California, US
wow.. looks like the 7d is not as popular, no one is recommending it so far.
Photographer
Jay Leavitt
Posts: 6745
Las Vegas, Nevada, US
365 Digitals Exposed wrote: wow.. looks like the 7d is not as popular, no one is recommending it so far. A 7D/60D/T2i with: 17-50/55 f/2.8 50 f/1.4 100 f/2 would be what I would personally go with, (and have - most of my port is a t2i and these lenses) but my budget is smaller than the OP's - a 5DII/6D have better qualities, and you can get better glass and still be shy of the $5,000 budget.
Photographer
alessandro2009
Posts: 8091
Florence, Toscana, Italy
Dennys Arias wrote: So I'm looking to upgrade but I'm on a budget of 5k give or take. I plan to upgrade to Full Frame, and have no L Lenses. The camera would be for video & landscape along with some portrait work. For landscape a tripod should be mandatory so you should include it in the budget. Also at least a polarizer filter and eventually a ND or an GND filter. For video a mirrorless-camera is often preferable to a DSLR system, especially for don't static subject with nice light. The main benefit about a full-frame DSLR camera is made from the high iso performance since if you see DXOMark the dynamic range isn't necessary better respect an aps-c camera. Canon 6d Dynamic range: 12.1 Evs where recent aps-c camera with Sony sensor doing better while the canon 7d and the canon 60d doing only slightly worse (11.7 vs 11.5). Reading your profile one of your interest is even wildlife where a 70-200 is usually too short, and naturally on a full-frame camera the situation became more critical. So i don't think you need a full-frame camera and if you add even the cost of important accessory you go out of budget without able to satisfy all your needs in spite of the sum, in absolute terms, don't small. So why don't buy instead a nice semi-pro body Canon xxD series (even used) and very good glass and important accessory?
Photographer
Philip from Scotland
Posts: 225
Edinburgh, Scotland, United Kingdom
You say upgrade... what have you already got?
Photographer
Dennys Arias
Posts: 6
Elizabeth, New Jersey, US
Philip from Scotland wrote: You say upgrade... what have you already got? Sorry on the late reply. And thank you all for the suggestions. I currently have a T3 with the kit lenses EF-S 18-55 & 75-300. I've been saving up for a 5DmkII since '12 but since then the mkIII and 6D came out so I'm rethink my upgrade. The T3 personally I think is amazing for a entry level. I've gotten great shots off it but I want a camera with better noise performance. Some of my shots can be seen on my 500px
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