Steve Cushing Photography

Embracing imperfection, Recording emotions, one image at a time…

2020 Canon RF 50mm f/1.2L USM

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The Lens details of a series of images taken by Steve Cushing on mirrorless camera.

Fitting is a Canon RF mount with a 20mm Flange Distance - this lens will fit and achieve focus to infinity mirrorless cameras but not on DSLRs.

Lens History

So how did lens making become such a Japanese thing after the war?

It is all about Cost and Politics

Before World War two the Germans made the best lenses. But after the war, with many plants bombed and the Russians taking over East Germany, production cost for making lenses were a lot cheaper in Japan. Even before the war German optics companies started to partner with Japanese companies to manufacture optic lenses used in industry and in cameras. Japan as one if not the only industrialised Asian nation in the world at that time, had the capability and the cheap labor to entice German manufacturers to move some of their production there. Similar to what is happening right now with China.

Together with this due to new post-war Japanese law and export control, Japanese optics companies were effectively out of the business from military purpose optics for long time. So, company that was making gun sight for fighter plane or war ships optics for battleship had to start competing on civilian market to survive.

European manufacture did not suffer this problem as much as Japanese did, and they still had lucrative military optics market as soon as cold war kicked in. Even decade after Japanese started to return to scientific or partial return to military optics market, they still had to make majority of money in consumer, industrial, or medical optics market.

The Japanese soon became so adept at making lenses originally for the Germans and now for their own domestic use, that companies like Nikon, Olympus, Minolta started. Canon was an off-shoot of Nikon. And so, the Japanese came to dominate the camera as well as the lens market. The Germans still have Leica of course which is considered the most expensive camera system in the world.

Autofocus technology for example were really designed for the military so this was quickly adapted for civilian purpose in Japan but remained secret in the rest of the world as it was used for military purposes.

So we now move up-to-date to one of the most advanced lenses ever made. The RF 50mm f/1.2L USM is a very fast standard prime lens for Canon's new EOS R full-frame mirrorless camera system.

Canon has constructed the lens from 15 elements in 9 groups, with 2 large-diameter ground aspherical lens elements, and 1 glass-molded aspherical lens element for better image quality into the corners of the frame when the aperture is wide open. In addition, there’s an Ultra Low Dispersion (UD) lens element to reduce chromatic aberrations.


Lens In Use

  • Build quality is outstanding.
  • It focuses by wire, even manually.
  • Fast autofocus for this sort of lens.
  • This is a huge, heavy lens
  • Ultrasharp, especially at f/1.2 and especially out in the corners.
  • 10-bladed electronic diaphragm gives fairly round openings at every aperture.
  • No distortion, even without correction.
  • Expensive.
  • No aperture or distance scales; everything is read-out and set, including distance, depth-of-field and aperture, in the camera.

This lens has been designed to give a wonderful BOKEH (Click for more information). The f1.2 permits not only low light use but a wonderful shallow DEPTH OF FIELD (Click for more information).

Summary

If you need one of the sharpest ultraspeed 50mm lens ever made, here you go. If you deserve the very best of everything and have a Canon camera, this is your lens. So this lens is for pixel perfect fanatics, where resolution rules. You do get a good quality image every time.

I took the images with this lens the day after the Rollie Projar Petzval format lens so from a lens designed by eye and with minimal optical elements to a computer designed extremely sophisticated optical design.


For images using this lens click HERE

For general information on lens design and lens elements go to the homepage HERE

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