Recent Posts
Canon EF 85mm f/1.8 on the R100 Via Adapter: A Cheaper Path to the 135mm Full-Frame Look
The 135mm f/2 has near-mythical status among event and reportage shooters: it compresses backgrounds, isolates a subject from a crowded room, and lets you work a few rows back without feeling like you’re in someone’s face. But at full-frame prices, it’s a hard lens to justify for a working shooter who doesn’t need it every day. There’s a cheaper way to get most of the way there — and it starts with a lens most people already own.
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Canon RF 100-400mm f/5.6-8 IS USM: The Budget Telephoto That Outperforms Its Price
Canon’s RF 100-400mm f/5.6-8 IS USM sells new for $749 and used for under $700. At that price, in a mount ecosystem where the equivalent L-series glass runs three to four times higher, the lens should not be this competent. It is.
The variable aperture is the tradeoff that makes everything else possible. f/5.6 at the wide end, sliding to f/8 by 400mm, is not a sports-photography aperture in the traditional sense — it will not isolate a subject against a blown background the way an f/2.
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Fujifilm QuickSnap Turns 40 With a Black and White Disposable and a Tougher Waterproof Model
Forty years into a product category that the smartphone was supposed to render obsolete, Fujifilm is not retiring QuickSnap. It is expanding it. To mark the 40th anniversary of its one-time use camera line, the company’s North American Imaging Division is adding two variants — QuickSnap Black and White, a monochrome disposable, and QuickSnap Active, an all-weather model that replaces the existing waterproof unit. Both are slated for Fall 2026.
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The Art of Reportage Photography: The Few Lenses That Actually Earn Their Place
A man in a red shirt throws both hands toward the lens, mouth open mid-sentence, eyes locked on the camera. Behind him a Breton flag snaps against a hot blue sky and a crowd thins out across a stone square. Nothing in the frame is arranged. The photographer was close enough to touch him, wide enough to keep the flag and the architecture in the story, and present at the half-second before the gesture collapsed.
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Tamron's 17-70mm F2.8 Standard Zoom Comes to Canon RF and Nikon Z APS-C
Tamron has confirmed a July 2, 2026 launch for the 17-70mm F/2.8 Di III-A VC RXD (Model B070) in Nikon Z and Canon RF mounts, bringing one of its most popular APS-C zooms to two systems that previously had no equivalent. The lens has been a fixture on Sony E and Fujifilm X bodies for years; the news here is the mounts, not the optics.
For Canon shooters in particular, the wording in the release matters as much as the spec sheet.
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Canon EOS R6 V, RF20-50mm F4 L IS USM PZ, and Video Creator Kit Lineup, May 2026
The EOS R6 V launches at $2,499 body-only, $3,699 as a kit with the RF20-50mm F4 L IS USM PZ, and $2,599 with a Stop Motion Animation Firmware SKU, shipping in late June and July.
The R6 V is the first full-frame body slotted into Canon’s V-series video lineup rather than the photography-led R6 line, with a 32.5MP sensor, 7K/60p RAW, 7K/30p Open Gate, uncropped 4K/120p, in-body stabilization, and an internal cooling fan that positions it directly across from the Sony FX3 and a7S III and the Panasonic S5 IIX in the hybrid creator bracket.
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Sony Alpha 7R VI, FE 100-400mm F4.5 GM OSS, XLR-A4 Adaptor, and SA-Series Battery Ecosystem, May 2026
The Alpha 7R VI lands in June 2026 at approximately €5,100 / £4,500 with a 66.8MP fully-stacked Exmor RS sensor, the new BIONZ XR2 engine, and up to 30 fps blackout-free continuous shooting.
The architectural story is that Sony has finally put a fully-stacked sensor into the high-resolution body. Stacked silicon was previously the province of the speed-focused 9-series; the 7R V was back-illuminated but not stacked, which meant resolution buyers paid a readout penalty for the pixel count.
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Canon and Sony Both Announce on May 13: What the Leaks Say
May 13 is shaping up to be one of the more significant single days in camera news in some time. Canon has scheduled an announcement for 9:00 AM EDT; Sony follows thirty minutes later at 9:30 AM EDT. Both events have been extensively pre-leaked, and the picture that emerges is of two companies addressing very different problems with very different philosophies.
Canon’s announcement is the EOS R6V. The body is built on the R6 Mark III and Cinema EOS C50 platform – a 32.
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Nikon Announces Development of the NIKKOR Z 120-300mm f/2.8 TC VR S
Nikon has issued a development announcement for the NIKKOR Z 120-300mm f/2.8 TC VR S, a telephoto zoom for full-frame Z-mount cameras that carries a built-in 1.4x teleconverter — extending its effective range to 168–420mm at f/4 via a thumb switch on the barrel.
The lens joins Nikon’s S-Line, the designation reserved for optics held to the highest internal standard of optical performance and build quality. S-Line membership is not purely marketing; lenses in this tier have consistently delivered the kind of resolution and contrast performance that holds up in demanding professional conditions.
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Telephoto Compression Is Not a Lens Property
Compression is one of the most misunderstood effects in photography, routinely attributed to the lens when it belongs entirely to the photographer’s position in space.
The phenomenon is straightforward. Stand close to a person with a mountain behind them and the mountain reads as distant, because it is distant relative to where you are standing. The ratio between your distance to the foreground and your distance to the background is large, and the image reflects that gap honestly.
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