Fair!It is not an issue of Photoshop. Lightroom is not creating anything the lens didn't capture, but rather adjusting the ratios of the information that is already there. "In-camera" is very different from RAW to JPEG. You have to do a fair bit of correction in Lightroom to bring a RAW file to match the in-camera JPEG since most camera JPEG engines to quite a bit of "fitting" to get exposures to fit into the 8 bit JPEG space. I always shoot RAW, so Lightroom is always in the mix. I will admit that running Topaz sharpening is pushing the envelope a bit since Topaz uses AI to extend detail a bit beyond what you could nominally recover, but it is still not "Photoshopping" in the classic sense. As an aside, I think the mirrors I mentioned in my response to Alan are much better than either of the ones you identified above. The Opteka and Samyang are both made by Samyang and the newer ones have been made very cheaply (and poorly). The TTArtisans 250mm f/5.6 is an exception as it is actually quite good and not crazy expensive. I see photography as an art form, which is to say I am not trying to exactly recreate the image that was seen by the eye (impossible in any case, because there is no available display mechanism with enough DR), but rather to create an image that tells the story of what I saw when I looked at the scene.
I meant photoshop in the sense that some people will take great liberty with the image out of the camera and then present it as what the lens does. Even though in-camera is using an HEIC or JPEG conversion algorithm I’m assuming the end result from one Canon to the next is sufficiently consistent that opinions that are definitely about the lens and not one’s software skill can be made. I’m also using Affinity but if someone wants to know about the lens itself I’ll restrict the image to Canon internal algorithms. Beyond that, I might have used the lens but really I’m showing off interpretive art bespoke to me and not Canon + a lens.
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