A 20-200mm travel zoom sounds like a dream until you try to live with one. This video puts two real options head-to-head and forces you to think about what you actually shoot when you only want to carry one lens.
Coming to you from Christopher Frost, this practical video compares the Tamron 25-200mm f/2.8-5.6 Di III VXD G2 with the Sigma 20-200mm f/3.5-6.3 DG | Contemporary in a way that’s easy to map onto your own shooting habits. The first tension is obvious and it’s not marketing fluff: 20mm versus 25mm changes what fits in the frame. You see a direct visual comparison, and it’s the kind of difference that shows up fast in tight interiors, street corners, and big skies. Then the trade flips, because the Tamron stays brighter on the wide end and holds that advantage through a good chunk of the zoom range. If you shoot indoors, or you like a little more background blur without jumping to a prime, that brighter wide end is the sort of detail that quietly changes your hit rate.
The video keeps going past the headline specs and gets into the stuff that annoys you after week two. Build is more similar than you might expect: light plastics, solid assembly, some weather-sealing, and small weight differences. One lens gives you a physical AF/MF switch and the other doesn’t, which sounds minor until you’ve missed a moment because you were poking at menus. Frost also looks at focus breathing, and the nuance matters if you do video clips that include quick reframes at the wide end. Autofocus speed comes across as a non-issue in normal use, with both lenses snapping in quickly in continuous AF. That pushes the decision away from “which one focuses” and toward “which one fits what you frame most often.”
Image quality is where people tend to overthink charts, and Frost doesn’t pretend these are primes. Using a 61-megapixel body, he shows that both lenses can look impressively sharp in the center, then fall off in the corners, especially at the extremes. The interesting part is how the lead changes by focal length and aperture: one has an edge in corner sharpness at the widest view when stopped down a bit, while the other pulls slightly ahead in parts of the mid-range. At 200mm, the differences shift again, including how much color fringing you’ll notice in rough corners. If you’re used to pixel-peeping, the calm takeaway is that you’ll be fighting small, inconsistent gaps rather than a clear winner across the board.
A few practical details in the back half can save you from buying the “right” lens and still feeling stuck. Distortion and vignetting behave differently if you turn off in-camera corrections, and the wider-starting lens pays a penalty there, which you may or may not tolerate depending on how much you rely on straight lines. Close-focus behavior is also more complicated than a minimum-focus-distance spec sheet. One lens technically gets closer only at the widest end, where working distance becomes so tight that lighting the subject gets awkward. The other is more usable at a mid-tele focal length where you can actually shape light and keep some space between the front element and whatever you’re shooting, including small products and details. Check out the video above for the full rundown from Frost.
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4 days ago
7







English (US) ·