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Canon EF 100mm f 2 8 Macro USM Lens for Canon SLR Cameras

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Canon EF 100mm f 2 8 Macro USM Lens for Canon SLR Cameras




This telephoto macro lens is capable of focusing to life-size (1X) without attachments. Although it replaces the EF 100mm f/2.8 macro lens, it is a completely new design. It incorporates a ring-type USM giving quiet, high-speed autofocus. The full-time mechanical manual focus gives very smooth manual focusing. For the first time in a 1X focusing telephoto macro lens, inner focusing is used.The lens length remains constant and a long working distance of 149mm makes worrying about getting too close to the subject unnecessary. Also, during focusing the front ring does not rotate making use of front-mounting accessories like macro ring lites simple and effective. “Three-group floating” focusing construction uses three independently moving groups, which holds focusing-related changes of aberrations to a minimum giving excellent image quality all the way from infinity to life size.

User Ratings and Reviews

5 Stars I use this for nature close-ups…
…but it’ll work for portraits. It’s as sharp as the more expensive a 24-70L lens and its color rendition is nearly as good. I’ve loaned it to budding photographers who have used kit lenses only and they can’t believe the image quality. Some of my best photos have come from this lens.

5 Stars Awsome Lens!!
One of my favorites. I tried the 50 and 100mm macros before buying the 100 and I couldn’t be happier. I take a lot of pics of flowers and bees and the extra reach of the 100mm allows me to get the good shot without scaring off the bees.

5 Stars What a great Lens!
Image from this lens is superior, deep and field come incredible and very sharp pictures. The macro allow you to take very small objects…almost every picture I take with this lens come out as high quality wallpaper.

It’s a little bulky but this is what you can expect considering the optics involved.

Highly recommended.

5 Stars My favorite lens!!!
First, I shoot with a Canon 40D and am an on-location photographer of families and children. I also love shooting nature and “things” – close ups of rust, the curve of a bench chair, dew on clematis, etc…

This lens is amazing for my purposes! At 2.8 I can follow playful toddlers around in a variety of lighting conditions and still get the shot. And for posed portraits, the bokeh is amazing, people have never looked so good! So overall, I prefer this lens to my 70-200 f4 L, even though I can’t zoom and have to move myself to compose shots. But the lower f-stop, the tack-sharp images, the ability to shoot macro, the weight (it seems lighter and less bulky than my 70-200), all tip the scale in the 100mm’s favor.

If you were considering the 70-200 f4 and decide to get the 100mm, you might want to consider picking up the “nifty fifty” 1.8 – another prime lens, and quite inexpensive too, but one of my FAVORITES, so versatile, I just love it. You can get wonderful dof effects by shooting things up close – the eyelashes of a child, an engagement ring perched on a newborn’s foot, the stamens of a lily….plus it lets you shoot group shots indoors with relative ease….

Anyway, back to the 100mm – a great investment, I use this lens all the time and it is fantastic.

4 Stars Great lens for the price!
I am an advanced amateur. I bought this Canon lens to round out my array of lenses for my Rebel XSi. I was interested in taking macro shots of bugs and other small objects, plus have the capability of a portrait lens. I haven’t had it for very long and I haven’t taken a lot of pictures yet, but it is impressive in its sharpness and accurate focusing. It focuses to .9 foot but you have to have a steady hand since it doesn’t have IS. Construction is solid (notice the weight) and all focusing is internal, so the barrel doesn’t move in and out. This is a great feature for macro images.

I recommend it highly but if I had the extra money I would go for the Canon 100mm macro lens with IS. That is the only reason I gave it a 4.0 rating.

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Nikon 50mm f 1 4D AF Nikkor Lens for Nikon Digital SLR Cameras

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Nikon 50mm f 1 4D AF Nikkor Lens for Nikon Digital SLR Cameras




Fast enough for shooting in just about any type of light, this is an ideal first lens; perfect for full-length portraits, travel photography or any type of available-light shooting. The Nikon 50mm f/1.4D AF Nikkor lens delivers distortion-free images with superb resolution and color rendition. Accepts 52mm filters.

User Ratings and Reviews

4 Stars Good lens for the money, but there are better
I’ve owned two of these. Good image quality, but not quite as good as the new AFS version.

The filter ring is plastic. I could care less, but I did drop it repeatedly and chipped off a 3/4″ section of the filter ring. After some sanding, thing still works. That’s why I bought a second one–I shoot weddings and looks count. Using gear with large pieces missing just won’t fly. Also knocked a good chunk off the aperture ring.

I’m quite sure that this lens could survive normal use. However my first sample dropped off a four foot stage onto concrete. Repeatedly.

If you don’t plan on dropping your lens onto concrete, or rolling around a mosh pit with your camera, or running from wild animals in the forest, this lens will probably do.

If you want something with dust sealing, a more solid build, and must have autofocus in the nikon system, get the AFS 50/1.4. If you want compatability with film bodies AND autofocus, get this lens. If you want AF and the best sharpness, get the AFS version.

Moral of the story, use UV filters. They may not prevent your lens from getting damaged, but if I wasn’t using one, my original 50/1.4AFD wouldn’t still be functional (even with missing chunks) today.

4 Stars is a dream
I waited 2 yrs to buy this lens, and let me say one thing.. ITS AMAZING… the DOF and the creamy backgrounds are amazing, Exspecially on a D700, or even on a D70s. As for portraits outdoors, indoors sharp and love availible light(natural). On lanscapes brillant, I love it. Exspecially on my D700, I got star effect shooting my Christmas lights this yr…

Yes it is exspencive but worth it’s weight in gold.

5 Stars lens
Very well constructed, great photo’s, just a little hard to use for me…takes a little getting used to because of short focus.

5 Stars Worth Every Penny
While the 50mm 1.8D is much cheaper, a comparison to this lens shows that you get what you pay for.

The price difference is about picture quality, and not necessarily maximum aperture size. Having tried both of them out, the 1.4D gives me better results all around. Objects appear crisper, colors have more pop to them, and the bokeh is smoother.

As is generally the case, the extreme f-stop settings leave something to be desired. Depth of field, when it comes to f/1.4, is so small that I rarely ever use it.

I almost always focus manually, so it didn’t bother me too terribly much that I couldn’t autofocus with my D60 (I’ve since upgraded to a D90.) In those moments of laziness, though, I really wished I had sprung for the 1.4G.

This is the one lens I carry around with me at all times. Whether I’m out shooting in the city, out in nature, portraits, or anything in between, this lens will find it’s way onto my camera. It’s a great snapshot lens for parties, too. The wide open aperture is like staring into an abyss.

The 1.8D is a decent lens, and really can’t be beat when it comes to price. As an investment, though, the 50mm 1.4D is the way to go.

5 Stars Great lens
I have been using this lens for a while. It is the lens that spends the most time in front of my D700. This is the perfect available light/walk around lens. If you are good at not shaking when you move you can get away with 1/4 second shots with this lens. Wide open the lens isn’t the best there is but I don’t look at the pictures with a magnifying lens anyway. Remember when using the lens you have to use the foot zoom feature, walking closer or further away from the subject. And the 50mm was pretty much the only lens Henri Cartier-Bresson used, if it is good enough for him it is good enough for me.

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