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How My Photography Changed with Just One Lens: Sigma 30mm 1.4
photography

How My Photography Changed with Just One Lens: Sigma 30mm 1.4

February 22, 2025

I can't even remember the number of times I've been asked about my camera gear on Instagram, so even though I still consider myself pretty amateur, I wanted to compare how my photography journey started to where it is now! I'm proud of all the progress I've made and really hope to inspire you to start! Photography can be an expensive hobby, but I'm also a believer that you don't need the most expensive gear to create beautiful content and capture stunning photos. I haven't upgraded my gear in 6 years now and still am improving, so here is where I started and some stream-of-conscious thinking along the way. The sigma 30mm 1.4 lens is the perfect all around lens, and I can't recommend enough!

What do I use? Sigma 30mm f/1.4
How i got started with learning

I started my photography journey during the COVID-19 pandemic. I was stuck at home with a new puppy, all alone and bored since I couldn't travel outside of work. I decided then and there I'd finally start to learn how to use my camera. I bought it previously for some international trips, but I just shot in auto and never learned how to properly use it. The first thing I did was sign up for a local photography class. Since this was the pandemic, the stay-at-home orders kept changing, so the class switched to remote, which worked out. The class size was small, about 4 of us, and the teacher used to be a college professor and has traveled the world practicing photography. He made a guide for each of our different camera models, and we had homework every week where he reviewed our work and critiqued it/offered suggestions. I was struggling with learning how to focus my lens, so the class was really helpful, and I could ask all the questions!

Year-by-year comparison

Year 1 (2019)

Taking lots of pictures of cityscapes/travels, using auto setting, no editing style, just lots of heavy contrast and saturation/color, no consideration of lighting. Lots of exposure and a lack of adjustments in editing, very light editing in general.

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Year 2 (2020)

I started taking portraits of my dog as the subject, learning how to use focus zones, slowing way down, and learning aperture priority mode. I also decided to leave Virginia and just be in beautiful places, since that does help make your images "better". I do think you can find beauty anywhere, but sometimes it may take moving somewhere new to make you appreciate a space and explore it meaningfully. When you move somewhere new, you're also taking yourself on a journey to step through somewhere you may have never been before, which opens up your eyes to look more deeply into your surroundings and dream a bit.

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Year 3 (2021)

I started exploring night photography, taking lots and lots of photos of different landscapes and unique places across the mountain west, then the Pacific Northwest, on my first move. I started using a consistent preset for editing to create a theme, but still, photos seem over-exposed a bit. There was a little heavier contrast and whites, but the color palette was slowly coming together. My photos still didn't feel soft, though, and truly a reflection of the style I wanted. I was just having fun exploring new places (I roadtripped across the country and moved to Seattle for the summer) and taking photos!

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Year 4 (2022)

I decided to take content creation more seriously. I planned a huge trip across Colorado (planning around photo spots) and then planned a solo trip down the California coast (using my tripod

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a girl in a coral dress and her dog at the big sur coastline
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shikoku dog in abyss trail fall colorado
shikoku dog in hurtta winter pink parka
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hanging lake colorado

Year 4 (2023)

I kind of took a break from photography in the first half of the year (personal stuff dealing with), slowed down, stopped bringing my camera along to everything because i felt uninspired, lost some inspiraiton but found it again by the mid/end of the year and managed to still create here and there, but significantly less. The photos I did create, I was really proud of, but I was really struggling with motivation (and mainly focused on creating TikTok content/videos at the time, which probably contributed to the depression)

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Year 5 (2024)

I continued experimenting with framing, really finding my preferred editing style, and practicing night photography. Still lots of color like year 1, but way softer/brighter/more whites and warm and cool adjusted as needed. I focused on framing more, really considering lighting/time of day/weather, taking photos, and editing feels natural and comfortable

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Who This Lens Is Perfect For

Portraits and Landscapes mainly

I mainly shoot in A mode (aperture priority) because it's most convenient and easy for me. I don't like dealing with setting focus modes.

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Astrophotography

This is done in M mode (manual) because you have to handle the settings the focus manually to produce clear captures. The stars are far, so you need to set the distance to infinity first, then bring down lower once you find a star to focus the shot on.

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Why It’s the Best Value for the Quality

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