Cheapest PUMA Men's King Indoor IT Soccer Shoe,Black/White/Gold,7 D US

PUMA Men's King Indoor IT Soccer Shoe,Black/White/Gold,7 D USBuy PUMA Men's King Indoor IT Soccer Shoe,Black/White/Gold,7 D US

PUMA Men's King Indoor IT Soccer Shoe,Black/White/Gold,7 D US Product Description:



  • Microfiber toe reinforcement
  • Padded upper
  • GripTex ankle lining
  • PUMA CELL cushioning
  • Reinforced heel counter
  • EverTrack non-marking sole

Product Description

#70120 UPPER: Puma lite leather with Suede toe reinforcement, quilted vamp, GripTex ankle lining distinctive pro style fold over tongue. OUTSOLE: Evertrack non marking indoor outsole with CM EVA with e+Cell in the heel. For use on indoor and artificial surfaces. WEIGHT: (12.6 oz.)

Customer Reviews

Most helpful customer reviews

3 of 3 people found the following review helpful.
5Kings are the best
By Sig
Ive been playing soccer my whole life through college and Id have to say that Puma Kings are the best shoes Ive ever owned. I do have wider feet and Puma's definetly are wider shoes. I've never found a Nike or Addidas shoe that compares. Kings are the best.

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful.
5Balanced Soccer Shoe
By AJ
These indoor soccer shoes are great. I have not purchased a pair in a couple of years. They definitely went through a redisign. They are tighter around the ankle and form fitting around the toe area. Can't beat the leather. They are more slick than my Copa Mundials. Tongue is a bit nicer also. Highly recommended for the price!

0 of 0 people found the following review helpful.
1baja calidad - low quality
By Alfredo Osorio
I bought these shoes because I though that Puma only makes high quality shoes but my mistake....with only a month of use the sole began to take off.

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Buy PUMA Men's King Indoor IT Soccer Shoe,Black/White/Gold,7 D US

Best Price Tamron AF 200-500mm f/5.0-6.3 Di LD SP FEC (IF) Lens for Canon Digital SLR Cameras (Model A08E)

Tamron AF 200-500mm f/5.0-6.3 Di LD SP FEC (IF) Lens for Canon Digital SLR Cameras (Model A08E)Buy Tamron AF 200-500mm f/5.0-6.3 Di LD SP FEC (IF) Lens for Canon Digital SLR Cameras (Model A08E)

Tamron AF 200-500mm f/5.0-6.3 Di LD SP FEC (IF) Lens for Canon Digital SLR Cameras (Model A08E) Product Description:



  • Canon SLR AF mount; telephoto zoom lens
  • Internal focusing and low dispersion
  • 200 to 500 mm focal length
  • f/5-6.3 maximum aperture
  • Digitally integrated design

Product Description

  • Canon SLR AF mount; telephoto zoom lens
  • Internal focusing and low dispersion
  • 200 to 500 mm focal length
  • f/5-6.3 maximum aperture
  • Digitally integrated design
  • Customer Reviews

    Most helpful customer reviews

    112 of 114 people found the following review helpful.
    5Wonderful new lens from Tamron
    By netscorer
    This new lens, part of the Di (designed for digital) initiative from Tamron is very well built - light and balances well in hand.It compares nicely with much more costlier Canon 100-400 L IS and compliments perfectly 70-200 type of lenses to extend telephoto reach to incredible 800mm on 1.6x crop camera.Very sharp even wide-open from 200mm to 400mm it starts to slightly lose its edge at 500mm but still is very respectable. AF is quick and not very noisy. The lens can be hand-hold in broad daylight but is best used either with monopod or a good tripod (especially if you shoot in dusk conditions). Attaching optional 1.4x extender would allow to bring subjects up to 24 times closer compared to bare eyesight and still get a very high quality shot.From the drawbacks there is slight lack of contrast comparing to 'L' (professional) lenses from Canon and slow F/6.3 apperture at the tele-end, making AF sometimes difficult with cameras that are not designed for AF after F/5.6 (such as 20D or Digital Rebel). Putting extender or/and Polarizer filter on lens would cut light that reaches the camera another 2-3 times, making this lens very slow and forcing Manual Focusing. So if you need the speed at such extreme reach, better consider prime (non-zoom) lenses.The filter size is 86mm making finding an affordable quality filter for this lens a practical impossibility. But if you do manage to get a decent polarizer filter, using it would be much simplier then with any other large lenses due to included filter attachment ring. With any other lens the hood would be blocking access to the filter but thanks to this simple gadget, Tamron 200-500 can be used successfully with both filter and hood on.

    73 of 76 people found the following review helpful.
    5I'm betting that this lens gets better with time...
    By Paul L. Jakubowski
    I got this lens in the same set of purchases when I moved up from a Nikon D80 to a D300. So naturally, I tried it out on both before I sold the D80. Four stars on the D80; five on the D300. What CA I saw on the D80 images disappeared on the images from the D300 - the D300 automatically corrected the CA. This is why I say I think it will "improve" with age - the bodies will continually get better, and compensate for minor flaws.But in its own right, this lens is a significant value. Not only in price, but in utility. I had to ask myself if I would really use a lens in this range enough to want to hump it around (yes), if I really needed a fast lens in the 200-500mm range (no), or practically, if I could afford same (no). I decided I didn't want to deal with the weight and bulk of a multi-thousand-dollar fast pro lens, and I certainly had better places to put my already out-of-control photography spending in relation to what would be my least used lens.Since I wanted this lens primarily for cruise side trips (whales, bears, bridges, foilage, etc) which usually take place during the middle of the day with lots of light, convenience/cost was much more important than sophistication. I didn't need low light capability for sunrise/sunset landscapes, or to be sure to capture that one rare bird that only ventures out in the evening twilight. Further, portability was important. So, even though it's still the biggest space hog in the backpack along with four other lenses, all of which I use more than this one, the weight/bulk/cost to functionality ratio of this lens is still very acceptable to me. One other thing - it comes with a high quality, very usable, padded case of its own if you don't have a dedicated photo backpack.Advice? Use it on at least a monopod. Even though it's light enough to be shot handheld, the images are highly dependent on good support.One small negative. I've not found software yet which will automatically correct its barrel/pincushion distortion at various focal lengths. Neither PTLens nor DXO have it in their databases, and I've not seen the compensation factors published for Photoshop. While I am good enough to plug in factors that somebody smarter than me has figured out, I am not good enough to figure out those factors myself. So if any readers here ever find them/figure them out, could you share?

    51 of 52 people found the following review helpful.
    5Your get more than what you pay for
    By Q. Chang
    I could give it a 4 stars, but I decide to add one more to offset another reviewer's 1 star, which I think is not fair. I've used this lens for several months and very happy about its performance -- Well-taken bird pictures are good enough for at least 11X14 prints.I'm providing some technical tips here for long end (500mm) use --* Use a (light) monopod, which could save some treasure at 1/100 sec. On the other hand, even at 1/1000 sec, monopod still could help sharpness sometimes;* If light is ok, use f8, which is significantly better than wide open at 500mm and may reach the top of this lens;* Make good use of the light weight and 2.5m focus distance, approach the objects -- it's the key to get great bird pictures, although 500mm is also important;* Don't use teleconvert -- I found even 1.4X Kenko Pro 300 makes the image soft. Croping is better for this lens.You pay $800 for this 500mm. If you use it correctly, you will get more than what you pay for.

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    Buy Tamron AF 200-500mm f/5.0-6.3 Di LD SP FEC (IF) Lens for Canon Digital SLR Cameras (Model A08E)

    Price Compare Tamron AF 90mm f/2.8 Di SP A/M 1:1 Macro Lens for Canon Digital SLR Cameras (Model 272EE)

    Tamron AF 90mm f/2.8 Di SP A/M 1:1 Macro Lens for Canon Digital SLR Cameras (Model 272EE)Buy Tamron AF 90mm f/2.8 Di SP A/M 1:1 Macro Lens for Canon Digital SLR Cameras (Model 272EE)

    Tamron AF 90mm f/2.8 Di SP A/M 1:1 Macro Lens for Canon Digital SLR Cameras (Model 272EE) Product Description:



    • Lens Construction (Groups/Elements): 9/10
    • Angle of View: 27°
    • Minimum Focus: 11.4in.(0.29m)
    • Filter Diameter: ø55
    • Diameter x Length: ø2.8 x 3.8in. (ø71.5 x 97mm)

    Product Description

    The 90mm f/2.8 high-performance macro lens is ideal for portraiture and close-up photography. It captures powerful sharp images with a background blur. This lightweight, portable lens features Di (Digitally Integrated Design), multi-coating to its element surfaces, to improve performance with Digital SLRs.

    Customer Reviews

    Most helpful customer reviews

    104 of 105 people found the following review helpful.
    5Excellent choice for macro & closeups
    By Michael Sandman
    This is an excellent choice if you're interested in close-up and macrophotography -- it's sharp corner-to-corner, and you get life-size photos down to the size of a large bug. Usually you end up focusing macro shots manually, and the Tamron manual focus ring travels about 270 degrees, giving lots of smooth fine-tuning capability.For portraits and medium telephoto shots, the autofocus capability works well but it's audible. You can set a limiting switch so that it won't hunt through the entire range, from 8" to infinity. It's easy to switch from autofocus to manual by feel -- you can do it without moving your eye from the viewfinder.There are probably better choices if you want to do portraits first and macrophotography second -- Canon's 100mm and Sigma's 105mm macros, in particular, but the Tamron is an excellent choice for macro work.The lens body is plastic, so it's lighter than OEM lenses from Canon & Nikon. The light weight makes one wonder about how rugged it is, but it feels well put together, and anyway you shouldn't be using a lens to drive nails.Note that the 90mm designation applies only to full frame SLRs. On digital SLRs like the Canon 300D & 350D or the Nikon D50 & D70, the lens gives you an effecive focal length of about 130mm. So you get a bit more working distance for macro subjects, but you may have to stand back too far from the subject for portraiture.

    130 of 133 people found the following review helpful.
    5Updated (again) thoughts on the Tamron 90mm
    By M. Boone
    (Another year and one repair later, I still love this lens. Original review first followed by updates.)First impression: right out of the box, this lens is smaller than I pictured. I had experience with the Sigma 105mm, and this is easily smaller and lighter. For travel purposes, it is ideal, plastic build or not.I did get a few surprises when I put it on the camera (D70), so anyone thinking about purchasing this lens should pay attention. This info is already out there, I just didn't notice and was almost disappointed at first.1: This lens is only 2.8 at 10 feet to infinity. The maximum aperture drops as you focus closer, and at minimum focusing distance, where many will want to work to get the true 1:1, it is all the way down to 5.6. That was quite a shock at first, but I soon found that at such close range, even 5.6 gives you very shallow depth of field. It just means less speed, so a tripod will almost always be necessary unless you are really good at hand-holding.2: The switch between auto and manual focus requires you to push or pull the focus ring. I should have known this after working with the Sigma 105mm, but it is not obvious on this lens and I had to check the instructions. lol.Again, this information is in other reviews, and it may be obvious to most users, but anyone new to macro should keep it in mind to avoid any surprises.UPDATE: I've left off the old review taken from my first few shots, as I have much more experience to pull from now.This lens captures beautiful photos, that much is certain. I have not tested the Nikon 105mm VR lens, but from the examples I've seen, this lens can still hold its own, even without VR. (I used to think VR was meaningless on a macro lens, but I have found many times when it would be useful.)Strong points:* Bokeh (out of focus rendering) is stunning* Color is rich (super color with D70, can't wait to see what it does with a D300!)* Lens is light, less than half the weight of the Nikon 105mm VR* Focus ring is large and easy to useWeak points:* Auto-focus is slow, noisy, and hunts a bit at times* Lens is not fixed length, short when focusing at infinity, extends out when focusing closer, a significant amount* Plastic build (doesn't bother me, but some don't like it)For my money, the pros far outweigh the cons here. I use this lens a lot for product photography (at work), non-macro flower and other small items, but I almost never take it all the way to 1:1 because I'm often too lazy to get out the tripod, or not in a situation where a tripod is usable.One thing to note: auto-focus has recently started acting up on my D70. For a few weeks it would refuse to auto-focus, I would reboot the camera, take the lens off and put it on again, and it would start working until I turned the camera off once more. Most recently I have not been able to get the auto-focus to work at all. (It is the only lens in my kit that does this, so I don't believe it is the camera.) Since the auto-focus is always slow anyway, I've taken to keeping it in manual focus and just dealing with it. It's a hassle at times, but it does not detract from my enjoyment of this lens.UPDATE #2: Tamron warranty and service are incredible!As mentioned above, the auto-focus eventually stopped working completely with both my D70 and D300. All Tamron USA lenses come with a 6 year warranty (6 years!) so I printed a receipt off Amazon, filled out a simple form, and put it in the mail. A couple weeks later I received notice that it was being repaired, no charge of course, and it gave me an order number to track it.I was leaving on a trip a few days later and didn't want it sitting outside my house while I was gone, so I contacted Tamron service department to see if I could change the shipping address. It had already shipped out and would be at my house within the week. Unlucky for me it arrived the day I left, but I had someone take it inside for me the next day, so no worries. It has been tested and works perfectly! 5 additional stars for Tamron's repair department!I would recommend this lens to anyone wanting to do macro work, portraiture, product photography, or any not-quite-macro nature shots with lots of color.

    77 of 78 people found the following review helpful.
    5A gem of a lens at a reasonable price
    By P. Lastra
    I am professional photographer specializing in botanical and nature photography. The 90mm has proven to be excellent optically as well as ergonomically well designed. The light weight, for its size, coupled with the very intuitive af-mf push-pull design are great in the field. I work at Fairchild Tropical Botanical Garden in Miami. For images taken with the above lens, please visit [...].This lens has a couple little advertised qualities which make it double as a superb portrait lens:First, it is not bittingly sharp wide open at f2.8, just about perfect for softening skin flaws, Stopped down to f5.6 and beyond, this lens is simply too sharp and contrasty for the average face. Second, wide open and at f4, this lens produces very attractive out of focus backgrounds, perfect for outdoor portraiture, where backgrounds can easily be distracting and intrusive.Regards

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    Buy Tamron AF 90mm f/2.8 Di SP A/M 1:1 Macro Lens for Canon Digital SLR Cameras (Model 272EE)