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The expensive kind?
There are some pretty good vendors of used gear. www.keh.com and www.adorama.com usually has a pretty good inventory of Nikkor and Nikon compatible lenses. For wider than your 18-55, how about this?
Thanks for the links!Do you think that lens could shoot a real small room like that pic in the OP?
According to this guy, it would.
Is that a Fish eye? Probably not... at least not as a primary.
Hah...I was kidding...a realtor on Facebook posted it as a wtf?I like that tamron 10-24 that the realtor blog suggested...you could save good money by doing this yourself...What really helped me when I got my camera last year was to buy a good book other than the manual to learn what all of the settings mean...http://www.amazon.com/David-Buschs-Digital-Photography-Guides/dp/1285171306/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1371155337&sr=1-2&keywords=Nikon+3200
Judging by the odd angle of the floor, I'm guessing the photo was taken with a wide angle and then straightened in editing software. It could also be a tilt-shift lens, but it's my understanding that with that type of lens you wouldn't get any odd angles. Tilt-shift lenses are typcially used for architecture, but they've become a bit trendy lately.The problem with small rooms is that you pretty much have to shoot them with wide angle, but the straight lines become angled. You can either leave them angled or straighten them. If you don't straighten them right, the photo will look even weirder. The other thing about straightening them is that you lose picture information because essentially you are also cropping the photo, so if you're going to straighten them, you have to capture more room in the photo than you want so you can crop it out during straightening.Your camera has a crop factor, probably 1.6x, so that makes your 18mm an effective 28.8mm. That's on the high side of wide angle. You might need to get something in the 10-12mm range for true wide angle.
I did get the e-book edition D3200 for Dummies. I felt that was a good place to start. The problem with doing it yourself on all listings is the Sellers perspective. Hiring pros is a given here and if I did all the shots, the first phone call I'd be getting was, "I think my neighbors are getting more showings and they hired a pro... I wonder if you need to hire a pro?" And they'd probably be right! I'm a true noob! Yeah, I think the 10x20something is probably my best bet for this. Will that be ok for the exterior shots or will I want to change?
And they'd probably be right! I'm a true noob!
Your camera has a 1.5x crop, but the 10 - 20 something should be fine. Honestly, I would use the wide only when you're photographing small rooms. To get the least amount of distortion, and a normal (what our eyes see) view, you will want to photograph as much as you can at about 35mm, for outside too. You should use your feet to zoom in or back up instead of the lens whenever possible. Use the wide when you need to capture a small room. And if quantity is also important, take multiple images of a room and overlap the scene a little for a frame of reference instead of shooting at too wide of an angle for the bigger rooms. Also, most people will shoot at their standing height, so for an interesting view, shoot from about your hip level and/or bird's eye view (stand on a chair or step stool).
If Ashton Kutcher can manage that camera, you certainly can.
Thanks! Good to know! All he has to do is look good with that camera.... not going to happen here!