The end of an Era: Canon 5D Mark IV marked Discontinued

I predict in 10-20 years time the used value of DSLRs like the 5D IV will go up, just like some point and shoots. The next generation will want to know what it's like using an OVF.
DSLR OVFs all sucked. Really, really sucked. It's MF film era that had great OVFs. Truly a pleasure to use.
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These Are Your Favorite EF Lenses

What I am saying is that acutance measured using a two-dimensional test chart parallel to the camera's sensor tells you nothing about bokeh. Absolutely nothing.

Words from the mouth of Roger Cicala in an article titled Why I Don't Use An MTF Bench To Test My Own Lenses:


Another of Roger's articles at his lensrentals blog: Everything but the Sharpness




All lens design is compromise. The flat field correction needed to make a flat test chart look sharper on the edges very often makes out of focus objects harsher and busier than designs that are not made for potential buyers who are obsessed with how well a lens reproduces flat test charts above all else.
My offer was accepted, BTW. I think it was a really good deal, the lens (135mm F2 L) is supposed to be in great condition. I'll hopefully find out tomorrow because that's when it's supposed to arrive. I'm excited to give it a shot! I feel like I had or have a cheap Samyang 135mm full manual somewhere but I can't say I was fond of it or used it at all really.

I just think this Canon 135mm will be great for the style portraits I love taking....of my kitties mainly but probably people too. I did buy the new Canon RF 85mm VCM (I think it's the only RF mount lens I have) not long ago, which will be great too but I want a little more distance, especially with the kitties. I swear, when the camera gear comes out, they intentionally try (and often succeed) to sabotage my photos. Lol
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Opinion: Why the Great Lens Pivot at CP+ 2026 is exactly what the industry needed

Lots of folks just want to take a picture, and hope it will turn out better than a phone pic. R100 vs T7 with a 17-55 kit zoom either one at bestbuy under $600. sure, maybe not for me. but i might have already bought my last camera (r5iii with 2x faster read-out could get me to buy one more if i am still shooting action when it arrives). i think there is value in a product that will on-board new buyers. i think the r100 hate is all about the lack of a touch screen, not sure how deep into the menus the new user gets and the buttons work fine.

I find myself editing jpegs off my iPhone way more now than I thought I would. The software is just getting better and better at editing even jpegs so the phone is "good enough" in more and more situations.
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Canon Claims 23rd Straight Year of Number 1 Share of Global Interchangeable-Lens Digital Camera Market

I think the FS-1 I bought used had been traded in for an FT-1 not long after the FT-1 came out. It's been 40 years but I'm pretty sure that is what the salesman at Camera World in Charlotte, NC told me. The building they were in is long gone and the U.S. 74 freeway passes over where it was. Back in the 1980s U.S. 74 was a street level road that passed a block or two from the camera store. My FS-1 still had a nice form-fitting cloth-lined leather case on it, the lower half of which stayed on when you shot with the camera. I guess the case for the FS-1 wouldn't fit the FT-1 so the previous owner left it on when they traded it in?

I never noticed a flare issue. I did tend to shoot in more subdued lighting most of the time when I used the 40mm prime, though. The length of the 28-210mm lens I used on daylight probably eliminated most off axis light long before it reached the light box. It could vignette pretty heavily in the frame at wider angles of view.
I enjoyed that 40mm lens. It made my Hexanon 52mm f/1.8 feel slightly claustrophobic.
While irrational, I'd like to see Canon make an RF f/1.8 40mm. I can't bring myself to get the 2.8.
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These Are Your Favorite EF Lenses

I’ve never had a filter get stuck on a lens. I have had stacked filters get stuck together (ND and CPL), and I learned to keep a set of $8 filter wrenches in the bag when I bring filters.
I had, on my Zeiss 3.5/18mm EF lens, in Norway, caused by temperature variations (the Zeiss has a fully metal body). Since then I have a rubber pad in my backpack, because it is a real remedy, and with it I got this filter finally off this lens (at home, when I purchased it, unfortunately).
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These Are Your Favorite EF Lenses

Part of Roger's consideration is that even though he knows a minor scratch won't affect photos in any real way, such a scratch does affect many who would rent a lens from his business that arrives with such a scratch. It's the same thing with internal dust. He knows it doesn't really affect photos taken with the lens unless it's really full of dust, but they still clean them regularly at lensrentals because their customers won't tolerate lenses with very much dust in them.
I read his blog, too, but just around this time some of our family members with one digit ages threw my camera with the EF 50mm 1.2 in front down from a shelve, and afterwards I was relieved to find that the shards in the floor were only from the filter I had on it - the front lens was (and is) intact and I could use it for that particular family weekend. Otherwise I really would have missed this fast lens.

Another good reason for using filters is if you want to sell your gear after a while. I just sold my old EF 300mm f/4.0 L IS USM recently for a good price, because its front lens, that was always protected by a filter, was pristine.
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These Are Your Favorite EF Lenses

I share my love for the EF 600mm f/4 III with Neuro, plus the TC III series of extenders. My other most beloved Canon lenses still are EF lenses, too. One is my EF 85mm f/1.2 II because of its gorgeous mix of sufficient sharpness and a touch of vintage look - the RF version is much perfecter in every respect, but also more on the clinical side. And I still love my so versatile EF 100mm f/2.8 L IS USM that made hand-held macro photography suddenly so easy already with the old 7D I(Mk I), even with extension rings. I don't see any necessity to upgrade to an RF successor as long as it works.

And, yeah, my old lens love, my EF 500/4.5, built in 1995 in Utsunomiya, still rests in its box here, I can't give it away. It is connected with so many memories of trips, such as to Iceland (Latrabjarg, Myvatn....), smaller bird islands, often with special moments with animals. Here is one from South Germany, we watched these European bee eater couple a week long from our camo tent in early mornings, the female getting more and more immobile with the growing eggs in its belly, and the caring male fed her with one insect after another (image taken with a 7DII): Bienenfresser Ihringen 18_05_2015-3 Copyright.jpg
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Canon Looking At a Canon 18mm f/1.4 VCM?

Haha — I was just thinking that this morning in the shower.

Building on what you said...

While acknowledging that lenses can be used in many ways, let's look at this from the concept of matched perspective:

Let's say I have a 45mm or 50mm lens equivalent and I find my friend standing.

First, I decide to plant my tripod, mount my camera, and then take a 2/3rds body photo that nicely captures my friend, with a very minimal hint of where they are or what they are up to. I then swap my 50mm for a 100mm and, without moving the tripod, take a tight shot of their face: great eyes, nice hair, good looking person all-around. I then, again without moving my tripod, place my 24mm lens and take another photo — now we see they're at a park with trees and path. I repeat with my 20mm to emphasize the context a little more. I've now told a small story about my friend. Interestingly, because I didn't move at all, my lenses simply served to crop the scene to focus on one aspect or the other; the relative position of everything remains the same as they come into the picture. If I digitally crop my 20mm to be like the 24, or the 24 to be like the 50 then the placement of trees relative to the person and any other object remains generally the same but the amount of scene included does change. My perspective never changed from where my tripod was planted relative to the person — I simply showed more less of the world relative to that person.

Second, I instead decide to zoom with my feet and whether the 24mm or 50mm or 100mm I frame my friend to fill the sensor approximately the same: how the person looked and how objects around them appeared in relative position would change significantly. Trees would seem very close or very far away, as an example, regardless of how I might digitally crop the photos later.

So for people who shoot with primes the options matter if they are attempting to tell a story with the same perspective but different amounts of the world included in the scene. And approximately doubling the mm's from one prime to the next allows for meaningful jumps in scene crop factor to allow for different meaningful reflections on the subject without distorting the scene or subject from one photo to the next.

The Milky Way is a great extreme example because no matter where you walk to on your chosen continent your relative position to the galactic core is effectively the same: choose a 14mm, 20mm, 24mm, 35mm, etc. and you can digitally crop from wider to longer and achieve the same relative content with less scene.

You can reproduce this example with a zoom, such as 16-35 or 24-105: plant a tripod, choose a subject, take photos at different lengths, and then crop the widest to match something tighter and observe that the relative position of objects in the scene does not change.
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The end of an Era: Canon 5D Mark IV marked Discontinued

My 5DIV is going strong as a backup to my R5ii. Despite its limitations, I got some of my favourite images I ever captured on that thing. I suspect it'll live in my camera cabinet for a while yet, and will still join me on outings in the event of failure for my R5ii. It's as capable as the day I bought it, and it'll keep producing for me for years I think. Sad to see it discontinued, but it doesn't owe me much after 9 years of use!
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The end of an Era: Canon 5D Mark IV marked Discontinued

For those of us who started early with digital cameras, the original 5D was a watershed camera — a full frame camera that we could (perhaps barely) afford. A 5D was my first full frame body. It wasn’t perfect (it was a dust magnet, it wasn’t particularly fast, and it lacked capabilities we now take for granted), but it was a significant step up from teh 8MP APS-C bodies that were the contemporary alternative.

The 5D began to show the potential of the 5D line, with much higher resolution, live view (a boon to landscape photographers), video, and other improvements. For those like me, who used these cameras for landscape photography and similar subjects, the 5Ds and 5DsR were another big step forward, offering resolution that Canon can’t match with its current mirrorless bodies. (I still rely on my 5DsR.) The 5DIII and 5DIV continued to advance and distill the 5D concept.
My experience was similar to yours. I went from 10D to 5D. (I was shooting local bands in dark clubs at the time.) Yes, it was a dust magnet and the focusing was poor, the latter a trait carried forward to the 5D2. I replaced it with a 5D3 that I still occasionally use. I bought a 5Ds the day that Canon dropped the price by 60% but unless I'm printing huge and/or cropping a lot, I don't need the extra resolution. I often set the JPEG resolution to 22MP.
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The end of an Era: Canon 5D Mark IV marked Discontinued

For those of us who started early with digital cameras, the original 5D was a watershed camera — a full frame camera that we could (perhaps barely) afford. A 5D was my first full frame body. It wasn’t perfect (it was a dust magnet, it wasn’t particularly fast, and it lacked capabilities we now take for granted), but it was a significant step up from teh 8MP APS-C bodies that were the contemporary alternative.

The 5D began to show the potential of the 5D line, with much higher resolution, live view (a boon to landscape photographers), video, and other improvements. For those like me, who used these cameras for landscape photography and similar subjects, the 5Ds and 5DsR were another big step forward, offering resolution that Canon can’t match with its current mirrorless bodies. (I still rely on my 5DsR.) The 5DIII and 5DIV continued to advance and distill the 5D concept.
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Opinion: Why the Great Lens Pivot at CP+ 2026 is exactly what the industry needed

PS - There's a chance I may be testing teh new Canon RF7-14mm Fisheye on an upcoming trip. It could be a fabulous wide angle optic and pairing a cheap camera body (the box) and high end lens was something VERY popular back in the day with Asian underwater photographers.

At $1,899.00 for that lens I'm not sure I'd jump and buy one but still.....Even the lowly R100 can mont tons of great Canon R optics which is why I jumped to mirrorless....

The lens in many photographic genres rules in my book.....

Your mileage may vary....

DH
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Opinion: Why the Great Lens Pivot at CP+ 2026 is exactly what the industry needed

All this hate for the super low cost but capable R100......Please.......I have TWO using one in an underwater housing diving all over the world. It's cheap, super light for travel and can take any RF or older EF / EF-S lenses......

My 2nd one as a surface / back up I got off Canon's Refurb site for peanuts and both work flawlessly. Would I prefer it had a touch screen, CMOS DPAF II and Digic X like my Canon R50? Sure, but then cost would increase sifgnificantly.

Being a long term Canon user spanning the one control dial and buttons I fly this puppy easily......I'll likely pass them on to my two grandchildren if they show an interest in photography when I house teh R50 or whatever other model comes along.

Just a 40+ year Canon user's opinion still enjoying photography everywhere....

David Haas

Article I wrote on new UW strobes and my Canon R100.....

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SMALLRIG LP-E6P Batteries, We Have Used Them and Came Away Impressed

Smallrig is worse than any other manufacturer according to this review: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Pe-_BFC21gs&t=109s
Why is this promoted?
Probably because that's the opinion of one random person with a YouTube channel and it says something different than reliable, known reviewers (e.g., Dustin Abbott) and the reputation of SmallRig as a company.
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Canon Looking At a Canon 18mm f/1.4 VCM?

I'd go for mechanically linked focus with full time manual override and an external distance / depth of field gauge. Everything else can remain the same that would be compatible with those requirements.
AFAIK there are no FF AF mirrorless lenses with mechanically linked manual focus. Everything is fly by wire. With many of the modern linear AF systems I don't think it's possible (or maybe it's just impractical) to have mechanically linked MF.

This does bother me because we saw what happened with some of the older Canon lenses that were also entirely electronic for focusing. The 200/1.8L. The 50/1L. Many more. Once parts availability ends, the lens is completely useless if the AF motor dies.
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