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Today I own a Digital Rebel XSi and the only EF-S lens I have are those that came in the kit.

I've been reading a lot trying to decide for my next body, but oh boy, what a tough decision!

I'm between the 5D Mark II and the 7D.

Among the type of pictures I plan to take are:

  • Portraits;
  • Landscape/Nature
  • Pictures at parties and other environments in low light condition.

Should I go 5D Mark II or 7D?

Updated for clarification:

"the only EF-S lens I have are those that came in the kit." does not mean I only have the kit lens. It means my investment in EF-S lenses is limited to those that came in the kit. Besides the kit lens, I do also have a EF 70-300mm f/4-5.6 IS USM and a EF 50mm f / 1.2L USM. Neither of which are EF-S lenses.

I also have a Speedlite 580EX II.

I have found that under some situations where I can't use the speedlite, I have already maxed out shutter speed, aperture and ISO settings on my XSi. That's the reason for wanting to upgrade to a body that offers better ISO and performance under low light conditions.

Alfred Myers
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  • Also relevant: http://photo.stackexchange.com/questions/840/dx-or-fx-lenses – Reid Oct 10 '10 at 03:14
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    Also relevant. This user is asking if he should go from 5DMII to 7D: Replacing my XXD with a 7D? http://photo.stackexchange.com/questions/3819/replacing-my-xxd-with-a-7d/ – sebastien.b Oct 10 '10 at 05:36
  • thanks for the clarification. I think the confusion on the kit lenses stemmed from two things: first, since you didn't mention any other lenses at all, we read "only EF-S lens" as "only lens"; second, since this site has users of many photography systems, we don't know the Canon jargon and don't know that EF-S refers to APS-C-only lenses. – Reid Oct 10 '10 at 17:37
  • The 50L on the 5DII is brilliant. I actually had a muffler shop weld my 50L directly to the body. – Bobby Ketchum Dec 08 '10 at 06:08

5 Answers5

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For pretty much all of the types of photos you wish to take, the 5D II will be a better camera than the 7D. The 7D excels at action photography, with its superb AF system, high burst rate, and high resolution. It is an ideal camera for sports, wildlife, and birds in flight. Its high resolution sensor makes it easier to get good high res crops. The APS-C sensor also helps give telephoto lenses greater reach than a FF, which is ideal for wildlife and bird photography.

With the 5D, you get a full-frame sensor with larger photosites. This gives it much better low-light, high-ISO capabilities than the much higher density and smaller sensor of the 7D. The larger sensor is ideal for landscapes as well, and should do great for high tonal range portraits (I know many wedding photographers who live by the 5D II.) The 5D won't do particularly well where you need super fast and capable AF or burst-rate shooting. This rules out most sports, and makes photographing birds in flight more difficult. It can still do excellently for wildlife photography of animals that are not running, or perching birds.

jrista
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  • There are various rumours going around that the 5Dmk3 or equivalent will come out in 2011, and will pick up some of the newer features from the 7D, so it would really just come down to sensor size in that case (if you can wait a few months...) – drfrogsplat Nov 25 '10 at 01:29
  • @drfrigsplat: Aye, the 5D3 will pick up some of the 7D's features. It will get a similar (but not identical) AF system, and probably the LCD viewfinder. It won't, however, get the considerable speed of the 7D, keeping the 7D as an ideal camera for sports and wildlife. – jrista Nov 25 '10 at 03:10
  • One of the main reasons for the slow shutter speed is the size of the sensor/mirror assembly and also the size of the files, at something like 25mb per RAW file. As far as I have read elsewhere. – Nick Bedford Dec 08 '10 at 08:03
  • @Nick. Yup... 25MB and sensor/mirror size – Alfred Myers Dec 08 '10 at 21:07
  • Hindsight is 20/20, LOL. the 5DIII finally arrived in 2012 at 22.3MP, the same focus system as the 1D X that is far superior to even the 7D's, and 6fps compared to the 8fps of the 7D. I don't think anyone was quite expecting though, in 2010, for the price to jump $1,000USD from the 5DII! – Michael C Feb 03 '13 at 15:59
  • The frame rate difference, and the larger sensor, can still be considered detractors to the 5D III vs. the 7D for those who choose the 7D for its reach and speed benefits. If the 7D II arrives this year with the 61pt AF system (or something similarly improved over the 19pt one) and a 10fps frame rate, along with a process shrink to 180nm Cu w/ LightPipe tech, then the 7D II will maintain the same advantages over the 5D III (+ better IQ). It'll probably roll in at around $800 or so more than the 7D introductory price, but that is the price of commodity and currency inflation for ya. – jrista Feb 04 '13 at 21:01
  • Again, using hindsight: There are only two advantages where the 7DII outweighs the 5DIII for me (and I shoot with both cameras regularly). Reach and anti-flicker. The reach can be especially helpful in good light when that extra reach is desired. The anti-flicker is amazing under oscillating stadium/gym lights. In pretty much any other situation, though, I'll put my long glass on the 5DIII because the wider baseline of the AF makes it that much better than the AF of the 7DII (which is considerably better than the old 7D, but not as consistent as the 5D3). – Michael C Feb 17 '16 at 02:19
  • The 5D IV should be announced sometime this year, hopefully. I suspect it will get a pretty decent upgrade over the 5D III. I haven't been excited about a Canon camera in quite some time...their IQ just doesn't hold up in an increasing number of cases against the competition (it's still good, just not excellent across the board relatively speaking anymore). I'm hoping the 5D IV gets me excited about Canon again... – jrista Feb 17 '16 at 04:45
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It depends on what you want out of a body upgrade. If you want certain features, better build quality, handling, ergonomics, or user interface, then you should pick one of those bodies.

If you want better pictures, then do not upgrade your body. I think you would get a lot more out of buying better glass and a lighting setup(for portraits and indoor) for your XSi. With the kit lens, you are severely holding back your XSi. The XSi is capable of stunning images.

Glass, technique, and post processing are the most important when taking the shots you have mentioned. In sports, you do get limited earlier by a lower body for predictive AF, but an entry level with great glass can still produce stunning sports photos. And a body like the 7D will still produce stunning portraits, landscapes, and low light party photos.

eruditass
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  • Please see the information I added to the question. Thanks for the link! – Alfred Myers Oct 10 '10 at 17:23
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    Thanks for the update. I still highly encourage upgrading to some of Canon's excellent constant f2.8 zooms first. – eruditass Oct 10 '10 at 17:33
  • I plan on buying a EF 24-70mm f/2.8L USM (http://www.usa.canon.com/cusa/consumer/products/cameras/ef_lens_lineup/ef_24_70mm_f_2_8l_usm) together with the new body. – Alfred Myers Oct 10 '10 at 17:36
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    While I do agree with Eruditass that the XSi (which is the camera I have) is certainly capable of taking some amazing photographs, as someone who has used it for almost a year and a half for landscape and wildlife photography, I can warn you: It WILL be the limiting factor. I can't count how many times I wish I had a wider field of view with my 16-35mm L lens, or how many times I wish I had better ISO performance for low-light evening shots or shots of birds. I put all of my money into lenses early on, and have kind of been regretting the cheap body lately, and wish I had a 5D. – jrista Oct 10 '10 at 18:29
  • @jrista But he has the kit lens and has not explored anywhere near the limits of the XSi. If you upgraded the body instead of the lens, you'd probably have taken less impressive shots than you have to this day. If you UWA, you should get an EF-S equivalent lens like the Canon 10-20mm, Tokina 11-16mm, etc. Low-light shots with a lighting setup can be much better than higher ISO, and shots of birds are not on his list. Upgrading both together is fine too, if you have the budget. – eruditass Oct 10 '10 at 19:54
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    @Eruditass: Actually, he stated that he only has one EF-S kit lens, and that all the rest of this lenses are EF lenses. Given that he does have other EF lenses, and is planning to get the superb 24-70mm L along with a new camera, I think a better body will do him wonders. – jrista Oct 10 '10 at 20:04
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I'm unconvinced you need to step all the way up to the 7D or 5D-II. I don't know the Canon lineup, but IMO you should consider the midrange APS-C bodies instead - 50D or 60D based on a very quick glance at the Canon website. You could put the $500-1000 you save towards better glass, which is going to be a more efficient use of your IQ-improvement dollars and a more lasting investment.

This is particularly true given that you have the just the kit lenses now; much of the capability of fancier bodies will be wasted if they are not accompanied by corresponding lens upgrades.

Frankly, you might be perfectly happy with one or more better lenses and waiting a bit on the body upgrade.

Reid
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    As a Canon bod, I'd suggest it is often better to skip a range if you can afford it - better to get the low light performance of the 5D over a 50D for the sort of shots Alfred said he was after (If he'd said sports, then I'd probably fall on the side of the 7D) – Rowland Shaw Oct 10 '10 at 09:45
  • Thanks for the input Reid. By "the only EF-S lens I have are those that came in the kit" I meant that I don't have other EF-S lenses which are specific for APS-C bodies. I would be able to carry my two other lenses (one EF and one L) to a full-frame body. – Alfred Myers Oct 10 '10 at 11:14
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Not sure this is the right place, but I thought I would let you guys know that I went with the 5D Mark II.

The new body with a couple of L lenses (16-35mm f/2.8 L and 50mm f/1.2) and a Gorilla Pod did wonders (when compared to my previous photos) on my last vacation.

If I were to classify the importance of each of these factors in the improvement of the quality of my photos, I guess the order would be:

  1. Tripod
  2. Lenses
  3. Camera Body
Alfred Myers
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    I just saw this question, and was going to chime in with: "Eh, you know, if you're agonizing over this decision, you really want the nicer one. Life's short — go for it!" – mattdm Dec 08 '10 at 00:53
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As per jrista's breakdown, it sounds like you would get more out of the full frame sensor of the 5D Mark II than the faster, action oriented nature of the 7D. But the 7D is still a fantastic camera.

Nick Bedford
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