Re: Canon EF135mm f/2L USM
Yes quite nice Dustin.
bornshooter said:love itTWI by Dustin Abbott said:![]()
Yes quite nice Dustin.
Upvote
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bornshooter said:love itTWI by Dustin Abbott said:![]()
CarlTN said:bornshooter said:love it![]()
Yes quite nice Dustin.
bornshooter said:TWI by Dustin Abbott said:
love it
TWI by Dustin Abbott said:Here's a sample taken with the 135L + 1.4xII extender (189mm f/2.8L) I love that with the Canon extender you can do a separate AFMA and get better AF results.
Strange Magic by Thousand Word Images by Dustin Abbott, on Flickr
sanj said:TWI by Dustin Abbott said:Here's a sample taken with the 135L + 1.4xII extender (189mm f/2.8L) I love that with the Canon extender you can do a separate AFMA and get better AF results.
Strange Magic by Thousand Word Images by Dustin Abbott, on Flickr
Beautiful
CarlTN said:I've had my 135L for 4 years, love it. Probably never sell it. However, color rendition isn't necessarily its strongest asset. It's really just part of the whole package that makes it such a great lens. The color balance itself is a tad cooler than I like, and sometimes too green, so I compensate with some magenta bias in-camera. In my opinion, bokeh smoothness is its strongest asset. Sharpness, and both global and micro-contrast, are all a close second. I will find it hard to believe any current or future lenses in the 135mm focal length, will be a better overall lens. An f/1.4 or faster zoom of some kind, could possibly be a better overall lens, but would be pricey and hard to design and build. I find that much of the wildlife I like to shoot, needs such fast aperture for the low light...that none exist.
TWI by Dustin Abbott said:CarlTN said:I've had my 135L for 4 years, love it. Probably never sell it. However, color rendition isn't necessarily its strongest asset. It's really just part of the whole package that makes it such a great lens. The color balance itself is a tad cooler than I like, and sometimes too green, so I compensate with some magenta bias in-camera. In my opinion, bokeh smoothness is its strongest asset. Sharpness, and both global and micro-contrast, are all a close second. I will find it hard to believe any current or future lenses in the 135mm focal length, will be a better overall lens. An f/1.4 or faster zoom of some kind, could possibly be a better overall lens, but would be pricey and hard to design and build. I find that much of the wildlife I like to shoot, needs such fast aperture for the low light...that none exist.
I certainly would be interested in a replacement with IS (which would be huge for my event work), and I wouldn't mind if they could tighten up the CA a bit. It isn't as bad as my 85mm f/1.8, but still shows it on occasion. It's interesting what you say about color. It probably is a bit cool, which is ironic, since I'm partial to my Tamron 24-70VC which is probably on the warm side.
CarlTN said:TWI by Dustin Abbott said:CarlTN said:I've had my 135L for 4 years, love it. Probably never sell it. However, color rendition isn't necessarily its strongest asset. It's really just part of the whole package that makes it such a great lens. The color balance itself is a tad cooler than I like, and sometimes too green, so I compensate with some magenta bias in-camera. In my opinion, bokeh smoothness is its strongest asset. Sharpness, and both global and micro-contrast, are all a close second. I will find it hard to believe any current or future lenses in the 135mm focal length, will be a better overall lens. An f/1.4 or faster zoom of some kind, could possibly be a better overall lens, but would be pricey and hard to design and build. I find that much of the wildlife I like to shoot, needs such fast aperture for the low light...that none exist.
I certainly would be interested in a replacement with IS (which would be huge for my event work), and I wouldn't mind if they could tighten up the CA a bit. It isn't as bad as my 85mm f/1.8, but still shows it on occasion. It's interesting what you say about color. It probably is a bit cool, which is ironic, since I'm partial to my Tamron 24-70VC which is probably on the warm side.
Canon color rendition overall, is generally considered to be "cool". I've read it many places...but certainly not all Canon lenses have a cool temperature. Interesting you mention CA. My copy really doesn't have any, or if it does, I haven't found it. One troubling thing I'm noticing with the 6D, is that with the 135...sometimes AF is slower than my 70-200 f/4...especially in servo mode. Hard to believe. Also seems to hunt a bit more in very low light, than the "slower aperture" f/4 zoom. Very odd.
As far as color goes, I have never seen a color rendition and spectrum, as good as the 200 f/2L that I rented. I want one...but again, would prefer something a bit shorter that is an even faster zoom, with identical optical performance. I think it could be done, but if Canon did it, it would cost $15k !!
The Zeiss 100mm f/2 I rented, might have the best color for fall foliage, or possibly even green foliage. However, it also had some weird contrast, where it didn't go "black" enough...yet the bright end seemed very contrasty. The red end of the color spectrum was really alive and "analogue" looking.
TWI by Dustin Abbott said:Here's a sample taken with the 135L + 1.4xII extender (189mm f/2.8L) I love that with the Canon extender you can do a separate AFMA and get better AF results.
Strange Magic by Thousand Word Images by Dustin Abbott, on Flickr
Sporgon said:TWI by Dustin Abbott said:Here's a sample taken with the 135L + 1.4xII extender (189mm f/2.8L) I love that with the Canon extender you can do a separate AFMA and get better AF results.
Strange Magic by Thousand Word Images by Dustin Abbott, on Flickr
@Dustin, I think your 6D has inspired you
Lovely![]()
ScottFielding said:This thread did it for me, I have been looking to purchase this lens since moving to Canon last year...finally ordered mine last night!
Amazing shots posted up by all!
Cheers,
Scott
TWI by Dustin Abbott said:CarlTN said:TWI by Dustin Abbott said:CarlTN said:I've had my 135L for 4 years, love it. Probably never sell it. However, color rendition isn't necessarily its strongest asset. It's really just part of the whole package that makes it such a great lens. The color balance itself is a tad cooler than I like, and sometimes too green, so I compensate with some magenta bias in-camera. In my opinion, bokeh smoothness is its strongest asset. Sharpness, and both global and micro-contrast, are all a close second. I will find it hard to believe any current or future lenses in the 135mm focal length, will be a better overall lens. An f/1.4 or faster zoom of some kind, could possibly be a better overall lens, but would be pricey and hard to design and build. I find that much of the wildlife I like to shoot, needs such fast aperture for the low light...that none exist.
I certainly would be interested in a replacement with IS (which would be huge for my event work), and I wouldn't mind if they could tighten up the CA a bit. It isn't as bad as my 85mm f/1.8, but still shows it on occasion. It's interesting what you say about color. It probably is a bit cool, which is ironic, since I'm partial to my Tamron 24-70VC which is probably on the warm side.
Canon color rendition overall, is generally considered to be "cool". I've read it many places...but certainly not all Canon lenses have a cool temperature. Interesting you mention CA. My copy really doesn't have any, or if it does, I haven't found it. One troubling thing I'm noticing with the 6D, is that with the 135...sometimes AF is slower than my 70-200 f/4...especially in servo mode. Hard to believe. Also seems to hunt a bit more in very low light, than the "slower aperture" f/4 zoom. Very odd.
As far as color goes, I have never seen a color rendition and spectrum, as good as the 200 f/2L that I rented. I want one...but again, would prefer something a bit shorter that is an even faster zoom, with identical optical performance. I think it could be done, but if Canon did it, it would cost $15k !!
The Zeiss 100mm f/2 I rented, might have the best color for fall foliage, or possibly even green foliage. However, it also had some weird contrast, where it didn't go "black" enough...yet the bright end seemed very contrasty. The red end of the color spectrum was really alive and "analogue" looking.
I could really tell a difference when I was doing a head to head between the 24-105L and the Tamron 24-70 VC for my lens review. The color temperature was noticeably cooler on the 24-105L, and when I was comparing them side by side, my preference was always the Tamron (that is certainly just a matter of taste). What the 135L does so wonderfully well is the transitions in color and focus. So smooth, and the end result is typically very pleasing.
CarlTN said:TWI by Dustin Abbott said:CarlTN said:TWI by Dustin Abbott said:CarlTN said:I've had my 135L for 4 years, love it. Probably never sell it. However, color rendition isn't necessarily its strongest asset. It's really just part of the whole package that makes it such a great lens. The color balance itself is a tad cooler than I like, and sometimes too green, so I compensate with some magenta bias in-camera. In my opinion, bokeh smoothness is its strongest asset. Sharpness, and both global and micro-contrast, are all a close second. I will find it hard to believe any current or future lenses in the 135mm focal length, will be a better overall lens. An f/1.4 or faster zoom of some kind, could possibly be a better overall lens, but would be pricey and hard to design and build. I find that much of the wildlife I like to shoot, needs such fast aperture for the low light...that none exist.
I certainly would be interested in a replacement with IS (which would be huge for my event work), and I wouldn't mind if they could tighten up the CA a bit. It isn't as bad as my 85mm f/1.8, but still shows it on occasion. It's interesting what you say about color. It probably is a bit cool, which is ironic, since I'm partial to my Tamron 24-70VC which is probably on the warm side.
Canon color rendition overall, is generally considered to be "cool". I've read it many places...but certainly not all Canon lenses have a cool temperature. Interesting you mention CA. My copy really doesn't have any, or if it does, I haven't found it. One troubling thing I'm noticing with the 6D, is that with the 135...sometimes AF is slower than my 70-200 f/4...especially in servo mode. Hard to believe. Also seems to hunt a bit more in very low light, than the "slower aperture" f/4 zoom. Very odd.
As far as color goes, I have never seen a color rendition and spectrum, as good as the 200 f/2L that I rented. I want one...but again, would prefer something a bit shorter that is an even faster zoom, with identical optical performance. I think it could be done, but if Canon did it, it would cost $15k !!
The Zeiss 100mm f/2 I rented, might have the best color for fall foliage, or possibly even green foliage. However, it also had some weird contrast, where it didn't go "black" enough...yet the bright end seemed very contrasty. The red end of the color spectrum was really alive and "analogue" looking.
I could really tell a difference when I was doing a head to head between the 24-105L and the Tamron 24-70 VC for my lens review. The color temperature was noticeably cooler on the 24-105L, and when I was comparing them side by side, my preference was always the Tamron (that is certainly just a matter of taste). What the 135L does so wonderfully well is the transitions in color and focus. So smooth, and the end result is typically very pleasing.
Very well said, and I'll take it one step farther. The end result...is...PURE ART. Most everything out of either of the 3 cameras I have shot with the 135 f/2, looks like some kind of art piece...to varying degrees of success, of course. I will post a few images in the future...don't have time to sift through and edit them now.
Btw Dustin, any thoughts or tips about LR 4? I only recently bought it for use with the 6D. I'm used to CS5 and ACR. I kind of am getting used to how to make use of the changes to the sliders in the basic section (the "fill light" is gone, etc.)...but frankly, my main complaint is that I am a slow learner, and there are just too many choices and customizations in LR...regarding file management...where they get imported and exported, and how they're archived...etc. Once I get more used to it, I will make use of it.