Excellent lens for amateur cameras. Take it, you won't regret it; the crop is quite a "portrait" indoors. On the crop, it is. The 85 mm f/1.8G lens will, of course, be more exciting to use on the street, but purchasing it will cost you twice as much. These are some advantages: Very acute (at 1.8 - already good sharpness, from 2.4 - almost a razor) Lovely bokeh, however the 85mm lens is more suitable. Excellent for taking head-and-shoulders or full-length portraits (for full-length with a crop camera indoors, it is not always possible to run back). Furthermore useful for reporting purposes. When traveling, it should not add too much weight to the bag and should be lightweight. Good equipment (both caps, hood, pouch). Convenient for taking photographs and doing reports during the twilight hours (but it is still advisable to use an external flash). despite its advantages. It's not the easiest focal length to use when you're photographing indoors because you have to get further away from your subject, but you can still get a full-length portrait with it. In general, the waist and front are really good, and they are far better than trying to get 35 mm. But for reporting, 35 mm is obviously more practical; yet, this is also doable; you will only need to run back as far as possible, assuming that is even possible.
New Nikon 18-105mm Vibration Reduction π· Zoom Lens with Auto Focus for Nikon DSLRs
104 Review
Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 II Fixed Lens - Discontinued by Manufacturer
93 Review
Canon EF 40mm f/2.8 STM Lens - Fixed Black (6310B002) for US Cameras
76 Review
Canon EOS SLR Camera Lens EF 24-105mm f/4 L IS USM
124 Review