On June 17, Sigma is going to have a big day of announcements. They will be announcing two very cool lenses for the RF mount!
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There hasn’t been a lens like this that I can remember,
I've been wondering why Sigma doesn't go all out and produce f/1.0 aps-c lenses. Maybe the possible designs would be too expensive, heavy or poor quality for their customer base?The lenses look very interesting, but not sufficiently so to tempt me to buy an APS-C R body to use them.
To those who understand equivalence, the advantages of APS-C remain lower cost and size/weight. The FFeq of 17-40/1.8 is 27-64/2.9, so my RF 24-105/2.8 is ‘better’. Likewise, 12/1.4 is equivalent to 19/2.2 and the extra 1-1/3 stops of my 20/1.4 is worth more than the 0.5 mm difference (to me, based on DxO correction of barrel distortion).
With the Sigma RF-S announcement last year, all Canon RF-S cameras make better sense than most of their competition. Fuji can't do AF-C well in 2025, Nikon Z DX still lacks decent f2.8 zooms, and Sony only cares about the videographers/vlog market.All the sudden the R10/ R7 seem to be interesting againSeriously, happy for the APS-C shooters, but I think these lenses are not for me.
You beat me to the equivalence. I think the comparison will be weight and price vs the RF 28-70 2.8, not the 24-105 2.8. The specs are much closer to the 'enthusiast' RF 2.8 zoom, which weighs 495g, compared to .. 810 g for the older 18-35 f1.8. If it's 400 g or less, and $800 or less, then this is an amazing lens and makes me less grumpy about my M6ll eventually breaking down. If it's as heavy as the older f1.8 zoom then even on a light RF-S body it will be heavier than an R8 28-70 2.8 combo, and not tempting, for me at least.The lenses look very interesting, but not sufficiently so to tempt me to buy an APS-C R body to use them.
To those who understand equivalence, the advantages of APS-C remain lower cost and size/weight. The FFeq of 17-40/1.8 is 27-64/2.9, so my RF 24-105/2.8 is ‘better’. Likewise, 12/1.4 is equivalent to 19/2.2 and the extra 1-1/3 stops of my 20/1.4 is worth more than the 0.5 mm difference (to me, based on DxO correction of barrel distortion).
Agreed. I was just making it all about me.I think the comparison will be weight and price vs the RF 28-70 2.8, not the 24-105 2.8. The specs are much closer to the 'enthusiast' RF 2.8 zoom
We still need the EF-M 22mm f/2 ported over (or another similar bright pancake prime if Canon couldn't make it work on RF mount) and an EF-S 15-85mm type lens as someone else mentioned (preferably a constant f/2.8 or at least f/4), and also a proper m6ii/m200 successor to take full advantage of that compact 22mm f/2 equivalent. Lets hope the R50V was just the entry level first of several more slim pocketable bodies.These make me so happy, Canon APS-C will have much better options compared to EOS-M. Sigma is making every photographer happy
An APS-f f/1 will be close the same size as the equivalent FF f/1.4. If you slap a speed booster on a FF f/1.4, you get .7x FL f/1 lens. Given that 1.4 is less than 1.6, the speed booster is theoretically capable of a bit more illumination area than Canon APS-c, but not all that much. Bottom line, if you want to catch that many photons, it makes sense to go to FF.I've been wondering why Sigma doesn't go all out and produce f/1.0 aps-c lenses. Maybe the possible designs would be too expensive, heavy or poor quality for their customer base?