Showing posts with label ts-e. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ts-e. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Canon TS-E 45mm f/2.8 Tilt Shift Lens for Canon SLR Cameras

Buy Cheap Canon TS-E 45mm f/2.8 Tilt Shift Lens for Canon SLR Cameras


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Cannon offers this normal lens featuring tilt and shift movements. The floating system and rear focusing give sharp and stable delineation from 0.4 m to infinity. The 45mm focal length is ideal for obtaining a natural-looking perspective.
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Technical Details

- EF mount; tilt shift lens
- Floating optical system
- 45mm focal length
- f/2.8 maximum aperture
- Manual focus only
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Customer Buzz
 "Canon TS-E 45mm Tilt Shift" 2009-01-21
By Jackson Smith (Charlottesville, VA United States)
Excellent build quality. The photographs it produces are really nice. Certainley does not replace a camera with more movement, but a good addition to my 35mm kit.

Customer Buzz
 "One of my favorite lenses" 2008-10-30
By Jacob W. Morrow
Amazing lens. The learning curve is a little steep, but if you stay with it then you will be really happy with the results.


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Saturday, February 20, 2010

Canon TS-E 90mm f/2.8 Tilt Shift Lens for Canon SLR Cameras

Buy Cheap Canon TS-E 90mm f/2.8 Tilt Shift Lens for Canon SLR Cameras


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This is the world's first 35mm-format telephoto lens with tilt and shift movements. Gaussian optics give high-quality delineation and true background blur. The lens is suited for a variety of subjects, from products to portraits.
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Technical Details

- EF mount; tilt shift lens
- Gaussian optics give high-quality delineation and true background blur
- 90mm focal length
- f/2.8 maximum aperture
- Manual focus only
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Customer Buzz
 "Amazing lens with lots of creative possibilities" 2010-02-08
By AV Rob (West Michigan)
I also own the newer Canon 24mm 3.5L mark II tilt shift so I wasn't sure if I'd be happy with this earlier version of a Canon tilt/shift but I wanted to add tilt/shift capabilities in a 90mm. After using it for a few weeks, I must say it is a very impressive lens. While this one does not sport the "L" designation, it is as sharp as my "L" lenses. Color and contrast is very good, and it produces a wonderful bokeh as well. I use it with a full frame Canon 5D mk II. As with my other tilt/shift, it is easier to focus these manual focus lenses using Live View as you can also better view the effects of your tilt/shift combination. The focus confirmation works, but Live View (zoomed in) gives you a more critical focus.



Unlike the 2 newer TS/E models (24mkII and 17), you can not rotate the tilt and shift axis seperately. Your tilt and shift rotate together on this model. I understand you can have Canon rebuild to a 90 degree seperation if you so desire, but it is not something you can do out in the field when using the lens. However, in most shooting situations, this limitation will not be a problem. Also, as with other tilt/shift, it is better to get your exposure readings before making tilt/shift adjustments as the angle can fool your through-the-lens exposure readings. The lens is fairly compact for a tilt/shift model. The tilt/shift adjustment knobs are a bit on the small side but still managable.



I am very favorably impressed with this lens, and while it sells for much less than its newer siblings, it can still hold its own in critical shooting situations. It has a wonderful rendering of images that is very pleasing. This focal length can be used for macro (you can use extension tubes with it), portraits, products, and architecture when shooting from a distance. Because of its outstanding optical quality it can even be used for landscape when you don't need a wide angle. It will also work with the 1.4X extender.



Overall, this is a very versatile lens that can be used in many creative ways. If you are looking for a tilt/shift and don't need wide angle, this lens has exceptional optical quality, sturdy build, and costs much less than the newer models recently introduced. Highly recommended.

Customer Buzz
 "Great creative tool" 2009-05-22
By Eric Slay (Orange County, CA)
Before I start the review, let me state that I am a professional wedding photographer and my review will be from that perspective.



Having the TS-E 90 is, in my opinion, the equivalent to having a fish-eye lens. Once you get to a certain point in your career (or expensive hobby), you start to look for ways to trigger more creativity and give you that feeling you got when you bought your first L lens. Like a fisheye, this lens allows you to create images that stand out from the crowd. Of course the effects are different, but the reasoning behind the purchase/owning the lenses is the same: to give you more creative control.



This being said, the tilt-shift lens allows you to do several things that really make your images POP:



1. You can tilt/shift the lens to make a tiny slice of DOF which really makes your subject stand out. This is not tiny like an 85 1.2, but tiny more like a Lensbaby (but better). I use it to make the bride's eyes really pop out while giving a super-soft dreamy look to her dress and the background.



2. You can tilt/shift an image to make the subject(s) look like they're miniature. (If you haven't seen this before, Google tilt-shift photography) Although initially this seems gimmicky, and it is if over used, you can really utilize this feature to make some stand-out images. Whenever I employ this technique, such as a shot of a ceremony from a high vantage point, the bride and groom inevitably compliment the image and are amazed at how unique the shot it.



3. Finally, you can also tilt/shift an image of architecture (for me, churches) to stop the vertical lines from converging at the top. This makes buildings look like they should. Although this seems like a small benefit, the difference a tilt-shifted building makes is that much more professional than one that is not. It's another quality that makes clients compliment the image without really knowing why it's so good.



To conclude, while this is an expensive lens and is certainly not for everybody, I feel that if you can justify the price, it will most definitely be a great addition to your bag.



Customer Buzz
 "A sharp, well saturated lens" 2008-12-07
By Charles L. Griffin Jr. (Daytona Beach, Fla)
I do a lot of flowers and scenery. The tilt and shift lenses are often thought of as primarily for architectural photography, but the 90mm Canon f2.8 TS EOS lens has gained a good reputation for its close focusing and portrait applications, areas that are of interest to me.



So far, I'm pleased. I'll upload a favorite flower shot as an example.



What surprised me more than the versatility of the manually focusing lens is the color saturation--far greater than some L primes and as good as Leitz lenses. That says a great deal about the quality of the glass.

Customer Buzz
 "Wish it had zoom." 2008-11-22
By blekenbleu
Ease of focusing depends on the camera and one's visual acuity;

not so easy for me and a Canon 20D with standard focusing screen.

However, images obtained with correct focus can be highly rewarding.

Extender, extension tubes and ring flash are worthwhile accessories.



If Canon made a zoom with tilt+shift, it could be my primary lens.

Customer Buzz
 "Fantastic capabilities" 2008-09-08
By ShutterFlash (Portsmouth, NH USA)
This lens is a macro, a short telephoto, a portrait lens, and a landscape lens that offers new creative possibilities. Because depth of field can be manipulated as in a view camera, this is proving to be my most versatile lens in my bag, in spite of the fact it is "just" a 90mm prime lens. For macro shooting, even with an extension tube, additional depth of field possibilities open up with the tilt. The lens is a fantastic straight-on prime lens for portraits. I find entirely new possibilities for landscape shooting. And hand-held shots are no problem at all, even with maximum tilt. Though it is strictly a manual focus lens (the AF does not work on this one) the image in the view finder is so bright I have no problem manually focusing. Because of the extreme depth of field capabilities, my wide angle lens gets used less now that I have this lens to play with. I love it!


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Buy Canon TS-E 90mm f/2.8 Tilt Shift Lens for Canon SLR Cameras Now

Wednesday, February 17, 2010

Canon TS-E 24mm f/3.5L Tilt Shift Lens for Canon SLR Cameras

Buy Cheap Canon TS-E 24mm f/3.5L Tilt Shift Lens for Canon SLR Cameras


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Compact, wide-angle lens which enables tilt and shift movements. The floating optical system, with an aspherical lens element, corrects distortion and other aberrations. High image quality and compactness are the result. Great for architecture, landscapes and other wide-angle shots.
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Technical Details

- EF mount; tilt shift lens
- Ultra-low Dispersion glass with Fluorite elements; aspherical lens
- 24mm focal length
- f/3.5 maximum aperture
- Manual focus only
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Customer Buzz
 "Mechanically fabulous, optically horrible" 2009-12-31
By Abdulrahman Aljabri (Jeddah)
I bought this lens hoping to upgrade my architectural photography method from shooting wide with the 17-40L and then applying perspective correction in photoshop and cropping. My reasoning for such upgrade was that shooting wide and applying correction wasted much needed resolution, added distortion, and made the scene look slightly different than my intended final scene.



Therefore I got this lens hoping to put an end to all of that and get the image to its final crop in camera. Sad to say, that didn't entirely happen. This lens has disappointed me on three very important aspects: soft corners, vignetting, and chromatic aberration.



SOFT CORNERS

By far that is the most disappointing aspect. Pictures are unacceptably soft in the corners and no I am NOT referring to corners of pictures captured with the lens shifted by 12mm or tilted 8 degrees. I am talking about 0 tilt and 0 shift. In such setting the 24ts-e compared terribly to the 17-40L. Pay attention to the last part, this lens could not keep its own vs a zoom, and one of cheapest L zooms from Canon for that matter.



I have uploaded several comparison shots for you to see. To answer some speculation in advance, however, no I do not have an exceptionally bad 24ts-e lens or an exceptionally good 17-40mm lens. I can confirm this because I posted my test results to other photographers on a respected photography forum. The feedback I got was consistent, the 24ts-e performs poorly in general and my lens exhibited the same poor performance.



VIGNETTING

Going past 6mm of shift the lens will start to vignette. By 12mm, which is the maximum shift possible with this lens, the vignetting becomes pretty bad. This is especially problematic for a lens that is made for stitching images. Pictures taken to be stitched at medium to maximum shift will not match in luminosity. In fact, Canon has the 6mm-12mm shift range labeled in red. I guess that is their way of saying you should not use that range. That practically throws away half of this lens shift capacity.



CHROMATIC ABERRATION

That is the least offending aspect but still annoying (check the picture with the window labeled "bottom right") I can live with this problem because CA correction software can compensate for most of this problem, but who needs extra steps in post processing when working professionally under deadlines and high quality requirement to deliver?





Given this last problem alone I would have given this lens 4 stars. However, with the other two, more serious, problems I cannot give it more than 2.5 stars and thus the two star rating.



So should you get this lens? People using average lenses such as the kit lens, 28-135, or 28mm 2.8 might not notice any of the problems I mention because they are used to such results. In such case the new mechanical features are a welcomed plus. That being said, given the lens price I would say its not a good lens to buy. If Canon, however, was to discount the price of this lens I still would discourage buying it. Most people looking for tilt and shift usually need better quality results than this lens can deliver.

Customer Buzz
 "Great for Anasazi ruins and ghost towns" 2009-06-30
By Mark W. Bohrer (Saratoga, California)
I've used this lens on an EOS 1D Mk II at Bodie, California and for Anasazi ruins and petroglyphs in northern New Mexico. Its only big shortcoming is flare sensitivity, most evident in bright hotspots in the restored Great Kiva at Aztec Ruins National Monument.



It's a great problem-solver for converging verticals. Shifting horizontally, it let me shoot all of Chetro Ketl's main wall without walking into thin air off Chaco Canyon's North Mesa.



Use it with or without a tripod - but a gridded architectural focusing screen is a must. Focus assist helps if you have less-than-stellar eyesight. Stop down to f/9 or more for best sharpness, and watch your depth of field.



Meter your subject manually before tilting or shifting, focus on important detail, then compose. Remember metering isn't accurate once you shift or tilt, and focusing is brighter and easier before adjusting.



I have three other lenses covering 24-25mm, and this is the one I use most when I'm in the field.



OTHER CONS - It may tilt by itself when you pull it out of a tight-fitting case, even locked. If focus across the viewfinder is fuzzy, check for unintended tilt.



Sometimes I wish for tilts and shifts in the same axis, but not enough to trade for the II version of this lens.



A good lens overall - main reason I didn't give more stars is flare.

Customer Buzz
 "Great for what it is" 2009-03-28
By Luving it (Seaside, CA USA)
Never used cameras bigger than 35mm so can't comment on the similarity to the large frame world. But I suppose if someone does come from the large frame world, using this lens would be a piece of cake anyway. I am a hobbyist and like to use this for tall buildings and large landscape. On Canon 5D, it's not super wide, but wide enough. On a 40D it's much less wide, but the tilt effect is more prominent.



For best result it should be used on a solid tripod, but I found hand held completely possible in out door day light. Manual focusing is not that bad if you have camera with live view or a bright view finder (a 2x view finder would also help but then you need a tripod again). The metering used to be a science in the film world. But now with RAW and DPP (or photoshop), you can just give a few tries and find the right combination in no time. M mode is very useful since the camera won't mess your setting up once you settle on a combination of aperture and speed.



Can't wait to get out and use it on some real worthwhile scenes. If you've never used one, try it and see if it works for you! I don't know why this one is designated as L while the other two are not. I got my lens second hand so I can not comment on initial quality. But as a second hand in great shape, I'd say this is indeed an L lens. The lens is very sharp without T/S. The original owner told me it's sharper than the 24mmL. I don't have the 24mmL so I can't comment on that. But this lens certainly is really sharp all around. T/S increases CA around the border quite a bit.



Customer Buzz
 "Very cool specialty lens" 2008-05-30
By Jan Klier (Seattle, WA USA)
I had this lens for close to a year now, and have had many opportunities to use it. It's a great specialty lens if you frequently shoot what it is best at, and those type of shots are worth the money you spend on the lens.



There are two separate purposes for this lens: Shifting the field or shifting the plane of focus. The shifting the field applies to architectural and landscape photography. Tilting plane of focus is among other things an interesting and unique portrait style.



I've found that I use the shift 95% of the time on both architecture and landscape. I've found the tilt to be marginally usable on this lens, mostly because at 24mm this is not a great portrait lens - you would go for the 90mm version. The facial distortions at 24mm (particularly on full frame bodies) are just plain hideous and overpower any benefit gained from the tilted depth of field.



Any time you photograph a building this lens is exceptional in allowing you to retain the proper perspective. That's what tilt-shift lenses are famous for.



However, I've also found it helpful in landscape shots where I want to the move the horizon up or down to avoid a 50/50 split without introducing curvature on the horizon due to the wide angle. That can be particularly helpful when shooting canyons from the rim in Arizona, or wide angle beach scenes, both of which have strong horizon lines.



The two challenges to master with this lens are that it is manual focus only, which many of us are not as used to anymore with today's cameras, and the fact that a significant shift plays games with the camera's exposure meter. I've found that I either have to meter the scene with a light meter, or meter in camera unshifted, then switch to manual mode and shift the lens. Both workable, but extra steps forcing this to be a lens for very deliberate shooting.



People interested in selective focus may want to check out the Lensbaby lenses, which are purely artistic, but allow a lot more play with selective focus then this lens, which will only tilt in one direction.



In summary, I enjoy having this lens, and it has served me well. But it takes some time to get used to and to know which scenes it will help and which ones it will not work with.

Customer Buzz
 "Excellent Lens, more manual skills needed" 2007-06-21
By MGMcd (Columbia, MD USA)
I have had this lens for a few days. I ordered it since I was tired of stitching bad photos by hand, and finding everything out of alignment. I do mostly indoor and outdoor architecture, and nature scenes, so needed something with both a panoramic sweep, and to maintain parallelism in my subjects.



The lens allows 11 degrees of shift to either side of center, and it rotates, so shift is either left/right, or up/down. Out to 5 degrees of shift, I am finding the auto settings are not too perturbed. After 5 degrees, some manual setting skill is needed. I will develop more of those soon, I can tell. The lens also allows tilt capabilities, which produce a nice selective focus effect, not unlike a lensbaby. I don't use much of that, but may do some portrait work with it.



The build quality of this lens is rock solid. The optics are very nice. I got a Hoya UV filter, and there is not much light loss, although I think there is some peripheral CA.



Straight through photos (no tilt/shift) are very sharp out to the edge, but this is a manual focus lens. For my work, I set it to infinity and that is no problem. For closer subjects, this could be challenging for someone with old eyes. A focusing screen is next.



I attached a photo above of the US Capitol. This was hand stitched in PhotoShop from two images shot 5 degrees left and right off center. ON A TRIPOD, of course. Note that there is no misalignment of the vertical lines in the Capitol building. In fact, the blend line goes between the first and second bays next to center on the left side of the center section of the building. Even knowing where this line was, I couldn't see it. The alignment and metering is so good that there is a couple along the curb in the lower left, and the woman turns between shots, and there is some double exposure effect, but she is right where she is supposed to be from the previous shot 10 degrees to the other side. The original image was more than 5' wide, so I had to shrink this one down for posting.



Definitely a special purpose lens, but if you want to do good architectural shots (to preserve paralellism) this is the best you can do without going to medium format. IMHO.



Update from June 2008: I notice that someone has posted an image that seems to be taken without using the Shift effect, so that the flagpoles in the image are tilted toward the center of the frame. This happens when the plane of the image sensor is rotated out of parallel with the flagpole, and indicates the lens was not used properly for this shot. The poster there should have mounted the camera on a tripod, rotated the camera body and lens appropriately, and then shifted the lens UP. Then the flagpoles would be parallel with the edge of the frame and not be tilting inwards.


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