I finally pulled the trigger on the a7IV last week and I am honestly so hyped to start shooting with it but now I am staring at my bank account and then at lens prices and I am spiraling a little bit. I upgraded from an old crop sensor and the jump in quality is already insane even with my cheap primes but I really need a solid zoom for my kit. I have been doing a ton of digging online and everyone seems to point towards Tamron since Sony glass is just so pricey right now.
I spent all night yesterday watching reviews and reading forum threads and I keep seeing the Tamron 28-75mm f/2.8 G2 mentioned as the gold standard for a daily driver. It seems like the obvious choice because it is light and the autofocus is supposed to be super snappy on the newer Sony bodies. But then I went down a rabbit hole and saw people raving about the 35-150mm f/2-2.8 and man that lens looks like an absolute beast. It covers basically everything but it is also freaking huge and heavy and pushes my budget to the absolute limit.
I have a wedding for my cousin coming up in October in Chicago and I really want to be able to just carry one lens if I can because the thought of swapping glass during the ceremony gives me so much anxiety lol. My budget is pretty firm around $1500 but I could maybe stretch to $1800 if it is actually life changing and worth the extra weight. I also looked briefly at the 28-200mm because of the range but I read that the variable aperture is a total bummer for low light and the reception hall is gonna be pretty dim so I dont want to risk grainy shots.
I am just worried if I get the 28-75 I will miss that extra reach for the portraits or if I get the big one I will regret lugging it around all day. For those of you who have been using the a7IV for a while now what do you think is the best Tamron zoom for this kind of event work?
Agreeing with that analysis. The Tamron 28-75mm f/2.8 Di III VXD G2 is a decent option and safer investment, providing reliability for weddings so you dont stretch your budget too thin.
👆 this