What We Expect Canon to Announce in the Coming Months

That's not crazy. There are tons of Canon crop cameras out there, and users have almost nowhere else to go for RF-S lenses; I can imagine such an exclusive, high volume market being a big business priority.
There are tons of Canon crop cameras out there, but most of those users are content with the lens(es) that came in the box with their camera.
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What We Expect Canon to Announce in the Coming Months

Not next from Canon, but probably next to Canon....

Sigma RF-S 15mm f/1.4 DC DN (to replace their current RF-S 16mm f/1.4)

View attachment 228065

View attachment 228066


The old 16mm was equivalent to 24mm on fullframe when mounted on a 1.5x APS-C camera.
The new 15mm is equivalent to 24mm on fullframe when mounted on a 1.6x APS-C camera.

It is probably putting too much significance into this, if thinking Sigma has prioritized Canon's 1.6x crop-factor higher than 1.5x when considering fullframe equivalence of their new lens?
That's not crazy. There are tons of Canon crop cameras out there, and users have almost nowhere else to go for RF-S lenses; I can imagine such an exclusive, high volume market being a big business priority.

...On a related note, do you think Sigma (or Tamron) will add IS to any of their RF-S lenses besides the travel superzooms?

I find it odd, as stabilization was far more common in their EF-S lenses.
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What We Expect Canon to Announce in the Coming Months

Forget about any 500mm f/4 prime in future. Since Canon managed to strip down the weight of the 600mm f/4.0 to about 3 kg (same weight as my old EF 500mm F/4.5 L USM), an additional 500mm f/4 prime doesn't make any sense anymore. Canon would create only more production costs for two lenses that cannibalize each other's sales. In former times, in particular when the 6 kg EF 600mm f/4.0 Mk I was on the market, such a 500mm lens made sense, because it addressed users who wanted a fast, long supertele, but one they still could carry in a backpack with additional gear and, if trained enough, could shoot hand-held.

That's now all combined in the latest generation 600mm lenses, in particular because the radically new tele lens design Canon came up with the EF Mk III lens moved the center of weight towards the photographer. That made hand-held shooting even easier than before. My old club of an EF 500mm was much more top-heavy than the EF 600mm f/4.0 III, so I personally can follow e.g. flying birds perceptibly longer with the 600 than I could with the 500. So, to wrap it up: the market for a separate 500mm is killed by a huge progress in supertele lens designs. It is no neglect that Canon never came up with an EF 500mm f/4.0 III version.
I think Canon's waiting for the Sony & Nikon's 500mm f/4 before releasing their RF 500mm at 2.45-2.55kg. This shaves 20-23% of the 3.19kg 2011 EF 500mm f/4L IS II USM.

By comparison 2.52kg's the weight of a 2008 EF 200mm f/2L IS USM. For that lens I expect the much rumored EF 200mm f/1.8L IS USM to weigh 2.2-2.3kg
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Opinion: Love it or Hate it, Digital Correction is here to Stay

I haven't. I shouldn't have to. If Canon gave me options that weren't riddled with distortion, I wouldn't need to worry about this. If I can't even correct my lenses with the most popular photo post-processing tool around, then there's a big problem.

Every image I've ever shot is in Lightroom for dating back from my 1Ds Mark II and 20D. I'm somewhat wedded to that platform. LR's library management is critical to me. [...]
Same here, I need the DAM portion of Lightroom as well so I use DxO PureRaw as a plugin for LR. That gives the the lens correction and noise reduction capabities of DxO and all the good bits of Lightroom. Both DxO PL and PR have a trial period,
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What We Expect Canon to Announce in the Coming Months

Thanks for your comment, zardoz. On my side, I am very happy with the results I get with the MPE combined with my R5 and a diffused MT26EX-RT flash, without tripod (hand held), working at 3-4 magnification. I imagine what results could be obtained with a similar RF lens. I hesitate to buy an EF 180 macro, second hand, tu use it on the R5, because I still hope for a future RF 200 macro. If you want to have an idea of the results obtained with the MPE on the R5, have a look at my website https://www.lesjardinsmerveilleux.be/galerie.php?page=12 for example. The problem I see with Laowa macro lenses is the difficulty to use them with a good macro flash, like the MT-26. And as long as I see, the quality of the Canon MPE remains the best, even if this brave lens is quite old. 😊
Splendide! :love:
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Opinion: Love it or Hate it, Digital Correction is here to Stay

I agree the size and weight of my RF 85/1.2L DS are not an issue in use, though it’s not my most used lens (that would be the RF 24-105/2.8L Z, which weighs a little more).

But I don’t travel with either of those lenses. I will be traveling with the RF 14/1.4, and will have no qualms about packing it. The Sigma 14/1.4 is the same weight as and longer than the EF 11-24/4L, and when I traveled with the latter lens it was always a carefully considered decision that usually meant not taking some other lens. The RF 10-12/4 and the RF 14/1.4 combined are about the same weight as the EF 11-24/4 or Sigma 14/1.4, and don’t take up too much more space.
My typical travel backpack is R5 + 10-20, 35 1.4, 85 1.2 and 100-500. Plus Mini 5 Pro
That's what comes with me on the plane. When we are on location, each day I choose a couple of the lenses, especially if hiking
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What We Expect Canon to Announce in the Coming Months

I want to see a
  • ...
  • RF 500mm f/4L IS USM
Forget about any 500mm f/4 prime in future. Since Canon managed to strip down the weight of the 600mm f/4.0 to about 3 kg (same weight as my old EF 500mm F/4.5 L USM), an additional 500mm f/4 prime doesn't make any sense anymore. Canon would create only more production costs for two lenses that cannibalize each other's sales. In former times, in particular when the 6 kg EF 600mm f/4.0 Mk I was on the market, such a 500mm lens made sense, because it addressed users who wanted a fast, long supertele, but one they still could carry in a backpack with additional gear and, if trained enough, could shoot hand-held.

That's now all combined in the latest generation 600mm lenses, in particular because the radically new tele lens design Canon came up with the EF Mk III lens moved the center of weight towards the photographer. That made hand-held shooting even easier than before. My old club of an EF 500mm was much more top-heavy than the EF 600mm f/4.0 III, so I personally can follow e.g. flying birds perceptibly longer with the 600 than I could with the 500. So, to wrap it up: the market for a separate 500mm is killed by a huge progress in supertele lens designs. It is no neglect that Canon never came up with an EF 500mm f/4.0 III version.
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Show your Bird Portraits

Do I recall that the advice about cooking and eating a Bush Turkey is to boil it for 24 hours then throw it away and eat the saucepan?

Haven't heard that specific one but there is one very similar about Galahs, where the rocks around the campfire are eaten in preference to the bird after a 3 day boil :LOL:
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Here We Go Again, More EOS R3 Mark II Chatter

Re: R3 Mark II.

I was curious about the average # of days from a Mark I announcement to a Mark II announcement for a variety of Canon cameras. This is based on the announcement dates of each camera...culled from putting the squeeze on cgpt.

EOS 5D — 1,122 days
EOS 6D — 1,746 days
EOS 7D — 1,840 days
EOS R5 — 1,469 days

EOS R3 Mark I (days since announcement) — 1,621 days to 2/23/26.

There seems to be modest time left, yet, at this point, the strongest evidence for an R3 Mark II is a blank cell in my complex spreadsheet and my optimism — and those are each questionable.
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What We Expect Canon to Announce in the Coming Months

You can't have everything...like lighter weight and a faster lens...well not until you successfully break the laws of physics. Same probably goes for the other options: longer and lighter or longer and faster. Or maybe you can have them if your name is on this list: https://www.bloomberg.com/billionaires/. Fortunately for me, I've got the lenses I want and I can rent the others........
Weight savings from last EF lens to curent RF lens is 22-30%.

Prior EF lens main draw is lighter and faster.
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Opinion: Love it or Hate it, Digital Correction is here to Stay

I "see" (?) my RF 85 1.2L which weights 1.2Kg and have no issues at all. My most used lens
I agree the size and weight of my RF 85/1.2L DS are not an issue in use, though it’s not my most used lens (that would be the RF 24-105/2.8L Z, which weighs a little more).

But I don’t travel with either of those lenses. I will be traveling with the RF 14/1.4, and will have no qualms about packing it. The Sigma 14/1.4 is the same weight as and longer than the EF 11-24/4L, and when I traveled with the latter lens it was always a carefully considered decision that usually meant not taking some other lens. The RF 10-12/4 and the RF 14/1.4 combined are about the same weight as the EF 11-24/4 or Sigma 14/1.4, and don’t take up too much more space.
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