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Jack Howard
Winter approaches, Halloween has passed. The days grow shorter and nights get longer. Yes, it’s that season once again, if you can believe it! Here is a list of ideas of great gear from Sigma for all the photographers (yourself included) on your list!
For the brand new parents
The Sigma 30mm F1.4 EX DC HSM is a fantastic lens for natural light photos of babies and young children. The fast maximum aperture gathers lots of light and lets you use faster shutter speeds without having to rely on strobes–just open the blinds a little bit and shoot wide open with this “new normal” lens for APS-C DSLRs, and the memories will be captured with gorgeously shallow depth of field.
For the photographer who wants to travel light and be ready for anything
The Sigma 18-250mm F3.5-6.3 DC OS HSM is a 13.x superzoom with Optical Stabilizer that can go from capturing wide angle landscapes to distant wildlife without skipping a beat. The Optical Stabilizer keeps shots sharp even at slower shutter speeds, so ditching the tripod doesn’t necessarily limit your creativity! For on-the-go family adventures, this lens is ready for just about anything. Check out Jack’s field test of this lens for image samples and hands-on tips!
For the budding cinematographer
HDSLR cinematography is exploding in popularity, and the 50mm F1.4 EX DG HSM is a super sharp fast aperture lens with great bokeh and lovely shallow depth of field for isolating the subject and softening the backgrounds. On full-frame HDSLRs, it is, of course, a classic, fast, normal prime lens. And on APS-C HDSLRs, it feels more like a short tele prime. Either way, it can make the feel of stills and videos captured have a timeless cinematic quality.
For the yearbook photographer and aspiring photojournalist
This holiday season, here’s two great lens pairings for photographers on the go, whether it’s for the school yearbook, the college newspaper, or just your own photo adventures. The premium line pairs the 24-70mm F2.8 IF EX DG HSM and the APO 70-200mm F2.8 EX DG OS HSM for a constant F2.8 maximum aperture through a focal range that’s ready for just about any assignment.
On a bit of a tighter budget? The 17-70 F2.8-4 DC Macro OS HSM and 70-300mm F4.5-5.6 DG OS covers an even a wider range of focal lengths in variable aperture OS zooms with a smaller price tag.
And check out this combo package pairing the 18-250mm F3.5-6.3 DC OS HSM and the EF-610 DG ST Flash for a price that’s pretty amazing! Together, this powerful strobe and 13.8X zoom lens are ready for photo shoots indoors and out–from group portraits to youth sports action!
For the skaters, bmxers, and extreme sports crowd
Capturing skate ramp action photos of you and your friends is a very different beast than shooting from the sidelines during organized sports with a long telephoto lens. So much of it is DIY, and its much easier to get close when you are directing the action and working closely with the athletes. And for this kind of sports photography, ultrawides are a great way to go. The forced perspective and foreground exaggeration effects work great for this style of shooting. There’s a stable of rectilinear ultrawide zooms and a quartet of Fisheyes to choose from. And check out this blog posting for tips on working with ultrawide zoom lenses!
For the Birders
When it comes to wildlife and bird photography, Sigma has a great line of telephoto zooms. The Sigma 150-500mm F5-6.3 APO DG OS HSM and 50-500mm F4.5-6.3-apo-dg-os-hsm are wildly popular long-reach zooms for making shots of avian subjects. Sigma Pro Robert O’Toole runs down the details of each lens in this blog posting. And don’t overlook the slightly smaller Sigma 120-400mm zoom for birds, either! You can check out amazing shots of small birds made with this great lens by photographer Lisa Franceski in this Our Pros | Your Photos video!
And of course, there’s the always popular “Sigmonster” 300-800mm F5.6 EX DG APO HSM that offers an amazing reach and range for wildlife shooters heading out on once-in-a-lifetime photo safaris.
For the Sports Photographers
Sports photography from the sidelines requires long reach and a fast maximum aperture for freezing the action. For reach and versatility that’s unmatched, check out the 120-300mm F2.8 EX DG OS APO HSM, which offers 300mm F2.8 prime performance in a constant aperture zoom. If tele primes are more your photographer’s speed, there’s three long, fast tele primes that are perfect for the sidelines (and the shorelines and bird blinds, too!)
For the explorer of tiny worlds
If the photographer on your gift list doesn’t have a dedicated macro lens in their kit, they are missing out on really magnifying the details of tiny worlds! The Sigma line of 1:1 macro primes is available in variety of focal lengths from 50mm to 150mm. Check out this blog posting exploring macro photography with Sigma lenses to decide which lens is right for your photographer.
And don’t forget about the Sigma EM-140 DG Macro Flash! This great macro ring flash works with all of Sigma’s macro lenses–as well as macro lensesfrom other brands with compatible filter sizes! (55mm and 58mm adapter rings are included with the flash. 52mm, 62mm, 67mm, 72mm and 77mm adapters are sold separately.)
Everybody needs a little light sometimes!
Built-in strobes on DSLRs are of very limited use. They drain precious battery power, take forever and a day to recharge, and generally give snapshot-quality results. Sigma makes two powerful shoe-mount strobes that offer great feature sets and won’t break the bank. For point-and-shoot simplicity with big strobe flexibility, the EF-610 DG-ST Flash bounces and swivels for controlling the shape, direction and softness of the light at a price that’s pretty amazing! And the EF-610 DG Super Flash is a top of the line pro strobe with a rich feature set including high-speed strobing, wireless triggering, stroboscopic effects and much more for significantly less than its competitors. For more on each of these strobes, click here.
And be sure to check out this great Accessories and Gadgets Gift Guide from Sigma Pro David Fitzsimmons!
Have any questions about the items on this list? Need more advice on which lens is right for your photographer? Drop us a line at photoworld [AT] sigmaphoto.com and we’ll try to help!
And be sure to enter our “Dear Sigma” contest on Facebook to see how Sigma Corporation of America just may grant your holiday wish!














Where is 50-150 2.8 OS ??
I’m waiting forever for this baby..
Dear Santa,
I would really really love an 8 – 16 UWA, not for any thing else, and i’ve been good all year, I would appreciate this a whole lot.
Your friend,
RHEDD
Where is Sigma 300 mm F2.8 Pentax mount?
Hi Rhedd, make sure you are following us on Facebook and are signed up for our Newsletter. Can’t say much more than that right now, but you’ll definitely want to check back frequently in the next few weeks for a cool holiday thing we’re working on…
I will take anything even refurb I was taught don’t be picky
10mm Fisheye f2.8 is the best fisheye i’ve ever seen! but except Canon 8-15mm…
Dear Sigma
Still waiting for the 120-300 f/2.8 in Pentax mount ! Yhere are many Pentaxians around that expect this lens !
I’m considering 50mm F1.4 (for nikon) lense for my son’s basketball shooting.
since many years ago I use une 28-105/f2.8-4 for film with my nikon cameras. It is simply superb so I sugest vividly t6he new one for digital.
Dear santa, I have been a really good girl and my dream lens is the 800mm ex apo dg hsm, I promise I will take really great pictures with it