puffo25

EOS R5 - Fine art landscape, travel,astro and pano
Jul 18, 2017
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italy
Hello, I own a EOS R5 and I have the following lenses: Samyang 10mm ED AC NCS f2,8, RF 15-35mm f2,8, EF 24-70 f2,8, RF 70-200 f2,8. I have a Nodal Ninja 4 rotator.
I shoot landscape, night/astro and street photography.
Mainly for astro/star trails/milky way and panoramic/landscape images I am wondering if there is in the market a very good wide lens. The Samyang 10mm is OK, but a bit wider and maybe brighter lens (autofocus will be perfect) is my dilemma as I do not really see anything available in the marlet, beside few manual focus lenses.
The older Canon 8-15mm F/4 fisheye is a possibility but first is not very bright and second is a bit old lens.
I am wondering if you think that anything is either already available or will come to the market soon (according to the Canon RF forcast for 2021 nothing), so just looking on alternative like Sigma art lenses...
What is your opinion?
Shall I just get the Canon 8-15 or I shold wait as sometimes will eventually come either in year 2021 or 2022?
 
8mm seems pretty wide to anticipate a really fast lens aimed at astrophotography. I'd have a hard time expecting anything faster than f/4 at that wide (if something that wide ever gets made for RF). If that lens did come, an f/4 may push your ISO way up even though you could get a pretty long exposure at that wide without star trails.

It may not be feasible or acceptable depending on what you're going to be shooting, but for going ultra wide with astro photography, I'd probably recommend stitching images instead. If you're going to stitch, you could look at something between 14mm and 20mm and a lot faster (like f/1.4-f/2.8) instead of waiting for a lens that may never arrive. I've used a Rokinon 14mm f/2.8 for this and gotten results I've been really satisfied with in the past, considering hw cheap the lens is of course. Those stitched images can easily get into the 8mm (or wider) territory. Also, the final image ends up being huge, which often shrinks down the noise even more when re-sized down to a more normal size. I've got a few 80MP images of the night sky from a 5DIV that I still really enjoy.

This is a pretty good tutorial on doing it on the software side if you're interested:
and this is the second half of the tutorial:

Good luck!
 
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