JJC lens hoods

drmikeinpdx

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Oct 19, 2011
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I was looking for a lens hood for my Canon 35mm F/2 IS lens on Ebay. Found several retailers offering a line of lens hoods under the brand JJC.

The prices varied a lot among the various vendors, but all were very cheap, so I took a chance and ordered one priced in the middle of the range. It turns out to work perfectly! It has a little springy release button on the side that I haven't seen before. I think it's a nice touch. I have no idea if the Canon equivalent has such a button.

The JJC hood does mount backwards for storage.

Anyway, if you have been wishing for a lens hood but didn't want to pay Canon prices and didn't want to risk your money on an unknown brand, I suggest you check out the JJC lens hoods.
 
Most new Canon lenses have the locking mechanism for the hood. IIRC, it was introduced with the 70-200/2.8L IS II in 2010.

The cheap third-party hoods generally lack the flocking on the inner surface of most OEM hoods to reduce reflections.
 
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neuroanatomist said:
The cheap third-party hoods generally lack the flocking on the inner surface of most OEM hoods to reduce reflections.

How many have you tried or researched? The 3rd party one hood for my 17-40L (to be compatible with crop) has the flocking and was still a fraction of the price of Canon's original. But I agree it's important to look out for this.
 
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if getting a hood for a 50 1.8 II or a kit lens, I would say get the best value, but if you are getting a hood for a lens like the 70-200 2.8 IS II, then the Canon ones are the safest option, I bought my 70-200 used without a hood, and recently get the OEM hood for $70, its really worth it, not a flimsy hood, its really built to last, and the locking mechanism is great.
 
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meywd said:
if getting a hood for a 50 1.8 II or a kit lens, I would say get the best value, but if you are getting a hood for a lens like the 70-200 2.8 IS II, then the Canon ones are the safest option, I bought my 70-200 used without a hood, and recently get the OEM hood for $70, its really worth it, not a flimsy hood, its really built to last, and the locking mechanism is great.

Yeah, sure...but can you get a Canon hood like this?? :)

Canon-70-200-f4-lens-hood.jpg
 
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neuroanatomist said:
meywd said:
if getting a hood for a 50 1.8 II or a kit lens, I would say get the best value, but if you are getting a hood for a lens like the 70-200 2.8 IS II, then the Canon ones are the safest option, I bought my 70-200 used without a hood, and recently get the OEM hood for $70, its really worth it, not a flimsy hood, its really built to last, and the locking mechanism is great.

Yeah, sure...but can you get a Canon hood like this?? :)

Canon-70-200-f4-lens-hood.jpg

Well.... There is always an exception to the rule ;D
 
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neuroanatomist said:
Most new Canon lenses have the locking mechanism for the hood. IIRC, it was introduced with the 70-200/2.8L IS II in 2010.

The cheap third-party hoods generally lack the flocking on the inner surface of most OEM hoods to reduce reflections.
I have bought JJC hoods for my non-L Canon lenses and always be satisfied with the performance. Some have come with the inner flocking and others not.
 
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I have JJC lens hoods for my EF-M lenses (not only are the OEM hoods stupidly expensive, they're also hard to find here for these lenses for some reason ...)

I wouldn't sing many praises about them, but they do their job. Good fit. No flocking, but they're ribbed on the inside. Cheap in every sense of the word, which I'm perfectly fine with.
 
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NorbR said:
I have JJC lens hoods for my EF-M lenses (not only are the OEM hoods stupidly expensive, they're also hard to find here for these lenses for some reason ...)

I wouldn't sing many praises about them, but they do their job. Good fit. No flocking, but they're ribbed on the inside. Cheap in every sense of the word, which I'm perfectly fine with.

I have the OEM hood for the M18-55, it's not flocked.
 
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