OP
Alpinehwite, I think you're making a smart decidsion on a touch-up-as-you-go approach. If you try to turn a garage into a work of art, it'll never get used. You need to treat it like any other tool, in my opinion.
dwp99, I'm pretty ignorant when it comes to photography. I'm using a Nikon D5100 camera, which I think is an entry level DSLR. Normally, I've got a 15-85 lens. The new one is a 10-20. The lenses seem crazy expensive to me (but then, they might not be -- I'm new to this stuff). The Nikon version of the lens I got costs $800. At that price, my brain says that I could get a good used car instead.
The one I got is made my Sigma, and costs about half that, new. And I paid less, since I bought mine second-hand. I think the thing that makes them so pricey is that the autofocus motor is built into the lens, not the camera.
I tried using a cheap Chinese wide-angle lens that screwed onto the existing lens. At it's best, I could get more into the frame. But it didn't focus correctly and would go dark around the corners. The new one does much better. Even with some distortion, it's nice to be able to fit so much into a single frame.
dwp99, I'm pretty ignorant when it comes to photography. I'm using a Nikon D5100 camera, which I think is an entry level DSLR. Normally, I've got a 15-85 lens. The new one is a 10-20. The lenses seem crazy expensive to me (but then, they might not be -- I'm new to this stuff). The Nikon version of the lens I got costs $800. At that price, my brain says that I could get a good used car instead.
The one I got is made my Sigma, and costs about half that, new. And I paid less, since I bought mine second-hand. I think the thing that makes them so pricey is that the autofocus motor is built into the lens, not the camera.
I tried using a cheap Chinese wide-angle lens that screwed onto the existing lens. At it's best, I could get more into the frame. But it didn't focus correctly and would go dark around the corners. The new one does much better. Even with some distortion, it's nice to be able to fit so much into a single frame.