Jean-Pierre wrote:
Other lenses that are recommended are usually the 85mm f/1.2, the 100mm f/2, the 135mm f/2, and the 200mm f/2. Those will all provide amazing Bokeh that stands out, and are all good as portrait lenses.
But apart from the 100mm f/2 those are pretty damn expensive and usually the 85mm f/1.8 is more often recommended than the 85 f/1.2 and it's very similar to the 100mm f/2.
Personally I really like the 50mm 1.8. It is...
maxjj wrote:
Its cheap,
Yes

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slow
Well - it's OK. It no lens for sports so it's alright. As long as it doesn't take ages to focus I can live with it. It's probably faster than it feels like when you hear it.
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and inaccurate to focus
Erm... not really. At least with my 50mm 1.8 I never had a problem with accuracy.
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and build quality is poor.
Yes. But as long as the image quality is not, I don't really care.
But I have to admit I'm mainly using it for product / still life photography like...

Canon EOS 500D
Canon EF 50mm 1.8 II
Canon Speedlite 580EX II (Master)
Nissin Speedlite Di466 (Slave)
F13
ISO 100
1/200 sec

Canon EOS 300D
Canon EF 50mm 1.8 II
Canon Speedlite 580EX II
F5.6
ISO 100
1/25 sec
But one thing really could be annoying: The lens only has five unrounded aperture blades so when you stop it down the "bokeh balls" are not round any more. One example at F2.8:

Canon EOS 500D
Canon EF 50mm 1.8 II
F2.8
ISO 200
1/30 sec
One last shot to demonstrate the small depth of field you can get with that lens:

Canon EOS 500D
Canon EF 50mm 1.8 II
F2.5
ISO 400
1/50 sec