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Wow, what a tall order.
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Honestly? If you really wanted a great set of glass to do this with, I'd consider getting a normal perspective lens (about 28mm on your 1.6x sensor) and then I'd consider getting an 85 f/1.2 to really give you the ability to get that creamy smooth bokeh.
Or, if you're in on renting a body, a 5D (mk II is good, but not needed) will go a long ways towards producing stunning results.
But, in the end, depending on what you're up to, there's a variety of lenses that will do fine, but if it was me, I'd probably try to get something for great bokeh and something that gives a "normal" perspective (50mm equivalent)
ETA: I also own the 28-135, and it's not the tool I would choose for a "Perfect" shoot, so don't think it'll do for the "normal" lens. The bokeh on the 50mm 1.8 is pretty bad in many respects, so I'd also probably not consider that for a "perfect" shoot.. Then again, the definition of perfect varies wildly, so these both may do fine for you, as post processing can fix much of what's wrong with those two lenses.
Message edited by author 2010-10-13 18:54:02. |