
Nikon 18-135mm
Folder: Lenses
The Nikon 18-135mm zoom lens was much criticised for its plastic mount and optical distortion. Wnen the 18-200mm came out with its do-it-all ability and vibration reduction tech, plus a real metal lens mount, the 18-135mm became Cinderella.
But it was sharp to a fault, and two-thirds the weight of the 18-200mm and it cost less, much less. I loved it.
But it was sharp to a fault, and two-thirds the weight of the 18-200mm and it cost less, much less. I loved it.
Land Rover
Man Waiting
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He looked a bit listless waiting for somebody to finish in a nearby shop. He agreed quite readily to have his photograph taken.
Nikon D50 + AF-S DX Zoom-Nikkor 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6G IF-ED lens.
Later the Same Evening
The George Inn, Sandy Lane, Wiltshire
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I used an 18-135mm lens on a Nikon D50. I cropped out distracting features. I confess to doing this often to compensate for poor technique.
Summer, 2013
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Kennet and Avon Canal at Caen Hill, Devizes, Wilts. Nikon D50 with a 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 G lens.
On the Water
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A sailor navigating Caen Hill locks on the Kennet and Avon Canal during July, 2013. Photographed during the period when I favoured a Nikon D50 with an 18-135mm lens. Almost weightless and, on a bright day, capable of snapping almost any subject.
However, in this case, I didn't much care for the colour rendition, hence the B&W treatment, which has made the file rather small.
On the Canal
Ascending Caen Hill
Tea & Kisses
Can Can
Two Nikkor Lenses
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I have used both the 18-135mm and the 18-70mm DX Nikkor lenses. Both are good. The 18-70mm is better built and faster, and the IQ is superior. But it lacks the reach of the 18-135mm which I found very useful when covering an event and wanting to avoid lens changes.
O.T.
Market Day
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Nikon D90 set at 200 ISO, f/4.8 and 1/100th. 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 Nikkor lens at 44mm.
Scutt's Bridge
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Rode, Somerset. In the 17th C. most goods were transported by pack horses, along dirt tracks, crossing rivers by fords or narrow bridges.
Photographed with a Nikon D90 and Nikon DX AF-S Nikkor 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6G ED lens.
St Laurence's Church, Bradford-on-Avon, Wiltshire
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The south side of the Saxon Church at Bradford-on-Avon. You can see the outline of the missing porticus. The architectural style is early 11th century; manuscripts indicate it was built 300 years earlier. Who knows? It is indisputably Saxon and free of ornament. For many years it was a schoolroom, a cottage and a warehouse. In 1856 the local vicar realised it was a Saxon church. 15 years later it was bought and rededicated as a church. It's just a two-cell structure, reflecting how small the population of Britain was in Saxon times: small communities have no need of big churches. Look at the width of the doorway. People were much slimmer in Saxon times.
Nikon D90 and Nikon DX AF-S Nikkor 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6G ED lens.
Boot Scraper
Whiteheads Lane
Stone Steps
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