Recent Posts
Canon, Build the Missing Budget Telephoto: RF 85–180mm f/2.8 or RF 100–200mm f/2.8
Canon’s RF system already has some remarkable lenses, but one category still feels oddly unfinished: the lightweight, budget-friendly telephoto zoom for full-frame photographers who want speed without carrying a massive professional lens. Right now the lineup jumps from compact consumer zooms straight to the big 70–200mm f/2.8 class. Those lenses are fantastic, but they are expensive, heavy, and simply more equipment than many photographers want to carry every day. What is missing is a practical middle ground.
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Canon, Please Give Us an RF-S 50–150mm f/2.8
Running two cameras has become my way of keeping photography practical. One body carries a wider lens, the other stays ready for reach, and suddenly the whole workflow becomes smoother. No frantic lens swapping, no heavy bag filled with glass, just two cameras that together cover the real situations photographers actually encounter. For me that pairing is the Canon R8 and the Canon R100. One full-frame body for versatility and low-light capability, one lightweight crop body for reach and mobility.
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Long Reach, Light Weight: Discovering the Power of the Canon RF 100-400mm on a Canon R100
A camera setup does not have to be large, expensive, or intimidating to produce images with serious reach. Sometimes the magic comes from a combination that on paper looks modest but in practice delivers a surprisingly powerful result. Pairing the Canon RF 100–400mm F5.6–8 IS USM with the compact Canon R100 is one of those combinations. Mounted on the APS-C sensor of the R100, the lens effectively stretches into a field of view equivalent to roughly 160–640mm, turning an affordable telephoto zoom into something that suddenly feels like a serious long-range observation tool.
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Pentax 67 200mm f/4 on Canon R8 Full Frame
When the Pentax 67 200mm f/4 is mounted on the Canon R8 using a standard Pentax-67-to-RF adapter, the lens behaves exactly as it was designed: a true 200mm f/4 telephoto. The adapter does not change the focal length or the aperture. It simply positions the lens at the correct distance from the sensor so the optics can focus properly, including infinity.
Because the Canon R8 uses a full-frame sensor, the entire photographic experience with this lens becomes very natural.
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Pentax 67: An Obsolete Mount That Refuses to Disappear
The Pentax 67 mount is technically obsolete, but calling it irrelevant would be a mistake. The system was created in 1969 for the large Pentax 6×7 film camera, later renamed Pentax 67, and it remained in production until the early 2000s. Pentax eventually ended development when digital photography overtook medium-format film systems, and no modern digital camera bodies use the Pentax 67 mount natively. In that strict sense the mount belongs to a discontinued ecosystem.
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85mm on Crop vs 135mm on Full Frame — Do You Get the Same Subject Separation?
Portrait photographers run into this comparison sooner or later because on paper the math looks simple. An 85mm lens on an APS-C crop camera produces roughly the same field of view as a 135mm lens on a full-frame body. So framing the subject — head and shoulders portrait for example — ends up looking almost identical. Stand at roughly the same distance, frame the same composition, and the scene inside the frame feels very similar.
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Medium Format Lenses That Adapt Beautifully to Canon RF
Mirrorless cameras changed the old logic of lens systems. The short flange distance of the Canon RF mount suddenly opened the door for optics that were never meant to sit on small digital bodies. Medium-format lenses — once built for giant film frames and heavy studio cameras — can now be mounted on relatively compact mirrorless cameras with a simple mechanical adapter. The result is a curious mix of eras: huge image circles feeding modern sensors, often producing images with a slightly different rendering character than contemporary digital lenses.
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Turning Photographs into Posters: When a Scene Becomes Graphic
Some photographs naturally want to become something else. You take the shot thinking it’s a documentary image — a restaurant interior, a street corner, a crowded café — and then later, while looking at it on the screen, you notice something different. The shapes line up. The light falls in repeating patterns. The figures become silhouettes instead of individuals. At that moment the photograph stops behaving like a photograph and starts behaving like a poster.
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Creating an Anamorphic Look from a Regular Photo in Post-Processing
An actual anamorphic lens changes the geometry of the image before it ever reaches the sensor, so the effect is partly optical and impossible to reproduce perfectly afterward. Still, a surprising amount of the “anamorphic feeling” can be recreated in post processing. The trick is to think about what visually defines anamorphic imagery. Three things usually stand out: an extremely wide cinematic frame, horizontal light streaks, and the distinctive oval shape of out-of-focus highlights.
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MacBook Neo in a Photographer’s Workflow: A Surprisingly Capable Budget Companion
Apple’s new MacBook Neo enters the market at a price point that feels almost unfamiliar for a Mac. Starting at $599, it sits closer to the territory of student laptops and Chromebooks than the traditional creative machines photographers have relied on for years. Yet when you look at its actual capabilities — Apple silicon performance, a high-resolution Liquid Retina display, long battery life, and macOS compatibility with the entire photography software ecosystem — it becomes clear that this small, colorful laptop could slide into a photographer’s workflow more naturally than its price suggests.
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