I use whatever lens does the job, but most often find myself using the 24-70. I manually focus because too often autofocus is fooled. Make sure the glass is clean, inside and out. Yes, the flash head is angled as I described in a previous post.
I'm also a firm believer in L glass. My macro lenses and my 24-70 are Sigma EX lenses, which I find to be an excellent value. The rest of my collection is L glass. By far, my favorite is my 135L. As much as I like my Sigmas, it's unlikely I'll ever buy anything other than L glass in the future. Buying new camera bodies to get better pictures is chasing a ghost. Put your money into the best glass you can afford. You'll always have the lenses and, over time, will find yourself replacing bodies. Remember, for the most part, a DSLR body is nothing more than a recording device. The quality of what it records is determined by the lens. Crappy lens, crappy image. Quality lens-- sharp, well-saturated, good contrast image that, if exposed correctly, will take minimal post-processing work.
gary
I'm also a firm believer in L glass. My macro lenses and my 24-70 are Sigma EX lenses, which I find to be an excellent value. The rest of my collection is L glass. By far, my favorite is my 135L. As much as I like my Sigmas, it's unlikely I'll ever buy anything other than L glass in the future. Buying new camera bodies to get better pictures is chasing a ghost. Put your money into the best glass you can afford. You'll always have the lenses and, over time, will find yourself replacing bodies. Remember, for the most part, a DSLR body is nothing more than a recording device. The quality of what it records is determined by the lens. Crappy lens, crappy image. Quality lens-- sharp, well-saturated, good contrast image that, if exposed correctly, will take minimal post-processing work.
gary