• The Canon Rumors Forum has officially been shut down as of July 10, 2026.

    All data will be deleted on September 16, 2026.

    the ad free experience will return by July 17, 2026.

Patent: Canon RF 11-24mm f/4L and Canon RF 8-24mm f/4L Fisheye

Ok I'm being picky. Am I the only one that hates odd numbers in focal lengths? Why 11-24mm? Can't they push it a bit further to 10mm? If not, just leave it at 12mm.

Also hate f7.1
Because the number they use is probably a lie, exaggerating the true number for marketing appeal. If it’s “11” it’s probably a 12 not a 10.
 
Upvote 0
Sure sure. I was speaking for myself. :) I would use this lens for architecture and landscape where I would be mostly at f11. So prefer a lighter lens with minimal vignetting. The use of this lens would rarely, if ever, encounter focus hunting (for me).
Have you thought about getting a tilt-shift for your landscape and architecture? Would seem much more suitable than any zoom. Sure, it's easy to correct converging verticals in post (with some loss of definition) but with a tilt-shift you can see the effect in the EVF *before* you take the photo. There are masses of mint secondhand Canon T/S-E lenses on the market at affordable prices, or there's the excellent Laowa 15mm Zero D Shift. Highly recommended.

I use the Canon 24mm T/S-E for a lot of my landscape and architecture work, but wider is better - 15mm or 17mm are ideal and you can always crop for a narrower field of view when needed. The only "drawback" of tilt-shift lenses is that they are usually completely manual, so slower to use, but for your genres of photography, slowing the pace often results in the best images ;)
 
  • Love
Reactions: 1 user
Upvote 0
I use the Canon 24mm T/S-E for a lot of my landscape and architecture work, but wider is better - 15mm or 17mm are ideal and you can always crop for a narrower field of view when needed.
I use the TS-E 17 and 24 for architecture. I find the 17 more useful in Europe, where there is often less open space around interesting buildings.

In addition to cropping, you can also use a teleconverter with a TS lens. The 1.4x behind the TS-E 17 gives an effective TS-E 24 With very good IQ (and the loss of a stop is likely irrelevant for most TS uses).
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 user
Upvote 0
I use the TS-E 17 and 24 for architecture. I find the 17 more useful in Europe, where there is often less open space around interesting buildings.

In addition to cropping, you can also use a teleconverter with a TS lens. The 1.4x behind the TS-E 17 gives an effective TS-E 24 With very good IQ (and the loss of a stop is likely irrelevant for most TS uses).
Yes, I wish I'd bought the 17mm T/S-E instead of the 24mm. The wider lens (remembering back to when I had a 16-35mm, which was stolen) is more useful for forest scenes, mountain landscapes etc although the 24mm is wide enough most of the time. I've just bought the RF100-500mm though, so funds available for photography are a bit limited for the rest of the year - too many other priorities (mainly travel) :)
 
Upvote 0
A little off-topic but can someone suggest a good, practical reference book on optics as relates to camera lenses... not looking for massive optical formulas but rather a book or document with loads of illustrations and the fundamentals... not a complete technical idiot as I am an engineer (Materials Scientist) but must have skipped the optics lessons in physics classes... always amazed at the knowledge base on this site and appreciate any input in advance...
 
Upvote 0