Canon EOS R Banding Issue Seems Solved By Latest Firmware Update

Canon Eos R

Some Canon EOS R users have reportedly experienced banding issues with their new camera.

Michael The Maven discovered that artefacts appear as banding in RAW files when lifting shadows. After Canon release firmware ver. 1.2.0 for the EOS R, Michael tested again and compared firmware ver. 1.1.0 vs firmware 1.2.0., and found that the banding issue was gone.

Most user will likely never have an issue with banding but we recommend you update your EOS R asap.

Canon EOS R:

America: B&H Photo, Adorama, Amazon USA, Amazon Canada, Canon Canada, Canon USA
Europe & UK: Amazon DE, Amazon UK, Amazon IT, Canon IT, WEX Photographic, Canon FR, Canon UK, Canon DE

Next Canon Announcement in May For RF 85mm f/1.2L Lens (EOS R System)

Canon RF 85mm

We were told Canon would make a camera related announcement at the end of April. It seems our source got the date wrong. And while being “camera related” it is not about a new camera.

The Canon announcement we were reporting doesn’t concerns a new Powershot or new EOS M camera. It is for the Canon RF 85mm f/1.2L USM lens for the EOS R system. At the time of writing we do not know if the version with “Defocus Smoothing” will be announced or the versions without it.

We expect Canon to announce the RF 85mm f/1.2L lens around May 9.

Deal: Canon EOS M50 with EF-M 15-45mm and Free Bonus Items – $599

Canon Eos M50

Adorama has the Canon EOS M50 with EF-M 15-45mm lens and bonus stuff on sale at $599. You get:

  • Canon EOS M50 Mirrorless Camera with 15-45mm STM Lens, Black
  • Lowepro Format 120 Camera Bag, Black3
  • SanDisk 16GB Ultra UHS-1 SDHC Memory Card – Class 10
  • ProOPTIC Complete Optics Care and Cleaning Kit
  • Corel PC Photo Video ART Suite 07 Software Kit
  • VidPro 4-in-1 USB 2.0 Card Reader
  • ProOptic 49mm Digital Essentials Filter Kit

Click here to buy the Canon EOS M50 bundle.

Tamron Confirms Lenses For Canon EOS R and Nikon Z Systems Are Coming

Tamron Lenses

In a recent interview with DPReview, Tamron execs confirmed the company will release lenses for Canon’s and Nikon’s full frame mirrorless systems.

Question: Do you have plans to create lenses for Canon RF and Nikon Z?

Answer: Yes, we’re also looking at that area. We have to do a lot of research and development into the reverse engineering, because they don’t disclose the details of their systems, so it’s a really hard job for us.

One size fits all?

Question: There are now four main full-frame mirrorless systems with different mount dimensions. Will you make completely different designs for the different mounts?

Answer: Each system has a different flange back distance and diameter. We need to do more research to see if we can use the same optical designs for the different mounts. But basically our approach will be the same as it is for DSLR. When we launch DSLR lenses we have the same optical design, and we customize for the different mounts. Even if the systems are totally different we’ll try to make a unified optical design.

If we design optics for a long flange back, we can adapt them for short flange back systems. It doesn’t work the other way around.

What about APS-C vs full frame sensors?

APS-C is still important to us, but when we think about the [industry], the full-frame market is expanding, so we’re looking at that market first – that’s the first priority. So gradually we’ll create a [full-frame] line and then at another time we can launch more APS-C lenses. The APS-C market is shrinking quite fast.

[via DPReview]

This is Canon America

Top 10 Cameras Canon Rumors Full Frame Mirrorless Camera Canon Eos R Pro Eos R Canon Lens Explorers Of Light

In this 5:50 minutes, a bit self-celebrating video, Canon USA lists all the areas in which they are active.

This goes from Canon’s highly specialised image sensors to 3D machine vision systems, the role Canon cameras play for filmmakers, the company’s efforts in medical research and diagnosing systems, not to forget the foray into space, and then more. A short promotional video that might be worth your time, just to learn in how many domains Canon is present.