Just exactly what I needed for my perennials!

Borga Voffe

Senior Member
this is my very first shot with my brand new shiny Tamron 45 /1.8

I am soo happy. I have a 105 macro, 12-28 zoom, 40 micro, 24 /2.8 and 70-300
None of tthese was useful for this specific purpose, taking some decent photos of them large garden perennials
Of cours, a tripod and that 105 macro would have done the trick better, what I need now, is a light setup - handheld supported by my knee :)

If only I had those lenses back in the 80-ies when I did this for a living ....

AKR_3371.jpg
 

Horoscope Fish

Senior Member
this is my very first shot with my brand new shiny Tamron 45 /1.8
This is the Tamron 45mm f/1.8 Di VC USD you're talking about? I've had opportunity to borrow/play with that lens exactly one time but I was truly impressed with it on my D750. It vignetted in the corners pretty hard when wide open but on a DX body you probably won't have that issue. Image quality was jaw-droppingly good, the lens felt bank-vault solid, it operated with buttery smoothness and if a lens can manage to look "sexy" the 45mm Di VC USD it that lens; love the sleek, simple design.
 

Borga Voffe

Senior Member
AKR_3400.jpg

My second shot with this lens. I have never figured out how to photograph oxeye daisy in full shadows, using flash and ruining the shot.
Maybe this Tamron might learn an old dog some new tricks :)
 

Borga Voffe

Senior Member
AKR_3450balder.jpg

Indeed my perennial lens!

Just like this, a photo of that lovely Wild Chamomile, a point and shoot picture just now when walking my dog around the corner. No tripod or heavy photo gear, just my Tamron 45 and d7200.
 
Top