Canon patent for EF-M 55-300mm f/4.5-6.3 DO IS lens for EOS M system

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A long awaited super-zoom lens for the EOS M system with better optics might soon be reality. Canon filed a patent for a  EF-M 55-300mm f/4.5-6.3 DO IS lens, featuring diffractive optics and image stabilisation. Canon already has a telephoto lens for the EOS M, the Canon EF-M 55-200mm F4.5-6.3 IS STM

Such a lens would be a welcome addition to the small lens line-up currently available for the EOS M system. Canon filed other patents for telephoto lenses for the EOS-M system. However, this patent might refer to a a product that could hit the market. If it does, then the price is the what I would like to know first. Optics with DO elements are usually not cheap.

  • Patent Publication No. 2015-232674
    • Published 2015.12.24
    • Filing date 2014.6.11
  • Example 1
    • Zoom ratio 5.27
    • Focal length 55.04 135.00 290.01
    • F-number 4.60 5.18 6.30
    • Angle of view 13.94 5.78 2.70
    • Image height 13.66 13.66 13.66
    • Overall length of the lens 136.00 175.46 192.00
    • BF 35.50 35.50 35.50
[via Egami]

Canon EOS-1D X Mark II set to be released in April 2016 at $5999 [CW4]

EOS-1D X

Latest tidbits about the Canon EOS-1D X Mark II suggest the camera will be announced in February or March and start to go to sale in April 2016. Most likely the EOS-1D X Mark II will be announced for CP+ in February. The rumored price is $5,999.

Nikon just announced the D5, the direct competitor for the EOS-1D X Mark II, so it is likely Canon won’t waste much time before releasing the EOS-1D X Mark II. The Nikon D5 has 4K video, it’s now a safe bet to say that the EOS-1D X Mark II will also feature it.

No reliable specs so far, click here to see earlier EOS-1D X Mark II rumors. Stay tuned for more.

[via Photo Rumors via Digicame-Info]

Go beyond your gear acquisition syndrome

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If you follow my blog you probably know that I am travelling for a couple of months. This time I left my DSLR and lenses at home and just took the EOS M3 with 3 lenses. I have to admit that at first I was a bit sceptical. Can you shoot what you want to shoot and the way you want to do it? Yes, you can.

You do not need a $6000 Leica camera, nor do you have to carry around a heavy full-frame DSRL with all the (also heavy) lenses that go on it. There are better options. I am not saying the EOS M3 is the best option or the only option. I am saying that the photos you’ll make depend by your skills, by your mood, and by other factors. Most of these factors have to do with you as a photographer, others have to do with the right light and setting, and it doesn’t account that much if you are a pro or just an enthusiast, or even a beginner. It doesn’t matter if you are using a Canon EOS-1D X, or a Rebel T6i. At the end of the day it’s a picture you want to show to your friends and family, not the big camera around your neck.

In the last months, while travelling South-East Asia, I saw a lot of people with big cameras and big lenses. It’s hot here, you have to carry all these stuff, and you have to take care of it. Many of these people was using their heavy and expensive cameras in the so-called “dummy mode”, i.e. in full automatic mode. It was funny to see flashes fire in daylight.

All this if obviously different if you are earning a living with photography. But if you are not, I suggest you should consider taking a small mirrorless camera with you when on travel. You will not regret it. Not having to carry around a bag with a DSLR and the usual 2-3 lenses made a difference for me. There are excellent choices out there. Fuji makes some fantastic mirrorless cameras, featuring sensors with a color rendition that’s amazing. The Fuji X-T10 and Fuji-X-T1 are likely the best mirrorless cameras out there, with an outstanding offer on lenses. And both are lightweight, easy to handle, have plenty of functions, and deliver amazing results. I think that most mirrorless cameras with an APS-C or 4/3 sensor are so good that 98% of us just doesn’t need more when on travel. The same is true for the EOS M3 (at least to me, my review). Other good option come from Olympus, Panasonic, Sony. If you want to go even lighter, Canon just announced five new Powershot cameras.

Isn’t it better to take a camera on travel that is less expensive, weights less, and still delivers excellent photos? Are you the kind of photographer who likes lugging around big and expensive gear while on travel? Share your opinion in the comment section.

Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II deal – $2,099 (reg. $2,199)

Canon EF 100-400mm F/4.5-5.6L IS II

Adorama has the Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II on sale at $2,099. Compare at $2,199. Along with the purchase of the lens you will also receive $83.96 back in Adorama rewards. Free expedited shipping. Rebate expires 01/30.

Canon EF 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6L IS II key features:

  • Compact, high performance L-series super-telephoto zoom makes it ideal for sports and wildlife Lens-d photography.
  • One fluorite and one super UD lens element provides excellent correction of chromatic aberration throughout the entire zoom range, helping to deliver high-quality images with high resolution and contrast.
  • Rotation-type zoom ring allows for more precise composition and excellent balance when handholding.
  • Inner focusing, ring USM, a high-speed CPU and optimized AF algorithms for fast and accurate autofocusing.
  • Optical Image Stabilizer provides up to four shutter speed steps of correction.
  • Three image stabilization modes (standard, panning, and during exposure only) provide outstanding results for a wide range of shooting situations.
  • Improved zoom torque adjustment ring allows easy setting of zoom tension.
  • New Air Sphere Coating (ASC) helps to significantly reduce backlit flaring and ghosting.
  • Highly resistant to dust and water, and amazing durability enabling shooting even in harsh conditions.
  • Circular aperture (9 blades) helps deliver beautiful, soft backgrounds.
  • Fluorine coating on front and rear lens surfaces helps reduce smears and fingerprints
  • Lens hood with side window permits specialty filters to be adjusted with hood inplace.
  • Newly designed tripod mount can be attached or detached without removing the lens from the camera
  • Minimum focusing distance of 3.2 ft./0.98 m with 0.31x maximum magnification
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Canon patent for a dSLR that can take EF-M lenses (if I got it right)

canon patent

I am not sure I understood this patent correctly. Machine translated Japanese patent literature is never an easy task to get. Any help is thankfully accepted.

However, Canon filed a patent for an SLR that can switch the position of the sensor (108 in the second image). If you look at the first image, you can see that the sensor stays in a different position and that the mirror (104) is there were the sensor was.

What about the flange distance, which is different for EF-M and EF/EF-S lenses? The Japanese text mentions an adapter that has to be used when using EF-M lenses.

I am really not sure I got this right. It appears to be a camera body for some sort of transition from dSLR to mirrorless.

What do you think?

  • Patent Publication No. 2015-219460
    • Published 2015.12.7
    • Filing date 2014.5.20
  • Canon patents
    • Position and the focusing screen image pickup devicecapable of switching the position of the
    • At the time of photographing preparation, leading to images which have been imaged on the focusing screen optically viewfinder
    • At the time of shooting, the image pickup device image is imaged in