photo:canonef14mm
Table of Contents
Canon EF 14mm f/2.8L lenses
see also:
introduction
- ultra wide angle rectilinear prime lens
- neither have front filter threads - only rear drop-in filter holders
- 2 versions:
- mark I was initially produced from 1991
- the later model mark II introduced in late 2007:
- has more glass with special glasses
- is larger, heavier
- focuses a touch closer
- adds weather sealing
- improved edge sharpness but still soft wide open
- different front cap system - now plastic instead of aluminium but designed to lock on thus less likely to fall off, but does not keep dust out and will chafe the lens hood
- fixes the strong amber ghost images caused by the sun in the original 14mm and replaces them with a much dimmer rainbow laser-beam
- BUT still unattractive 6 pointed sunstars
specs
Canon EF 14mm f/2.8L version I
- 14mm f/2.8 gives 114deg field of view
- 14 elements in 10 groups including an aspherical lens
- 6 aperture blades
- USM AF with full time MF
- close focus 0.25m giving 0.1x magnification
- rear drop-in gelatin filter holder
- 77 x 89mm
- 560g
Canon EF 14mm f/2.8L II
- 14mm f/2.8 gives 114deg field of view
- 14 elements in 11 groups inc. 2x aspherical and 2xED elements
- 6 rounded aperture blades
- Super Spectra Coating
- USM AF with full time MF
- internal focus
- close focus 0.2m giving 1:6.7 magnification
- rear drop-in gelatin filter holder
- 80x94mm
- 645g
- weather sealed
- ~$US2200
compared to the Olympus mZD 7-14mm f/2.8 ultra wide angle zoom lens
- despite the Olympus lens is a f/2.8 zoom, it is:
- lighter at 524g instead of 654g
- a touch longer at 106mm vs 94mm
- much more affordable at $A1499 compared to $A2659
- far more versatile as it can zoom to 28mm in full frame terms
- much sharper wide open edge-to-edge (see charts below)
- much less CA
- much less distortion 1.7% compared to 3.7% barrel distortion
- much less vignetting wide open 1.5EV vs 2.65EV
- has much nicer star shapes for astrophotographic landscapes of the Milky Way as it has less coma aberration
- has image stabiliser of 5 stops allowing hand held shots at 1-2 seconds courtesy of the Olympus cameras (the Canon has no IS)
- has eye detection autofocus for portraits
- has fast, silent AF for movies
- why would anyone buy the Canon 14mm lens then?
- if you already have a Canon full frame dSLR with 50mp and you shoot landscapes on a tripod at f/8 then it may have a use (although for static scenes, the new Olympus cameras can shoot 40mp HiRes shots with less moire on a tripod)
- one could argue you can get 2 stops better ISO on full frame, but with this lens you need to stop it down 2 stops to get close the the sharpness of the Olympus lens, so that argument generally won't hold much
- otherwise see your mental health therapist
From ePhotozine.com's reviews (not totally comparable given different sensor sizes):
reviews
version I lens
version II lens
-
- sharpest in centre at f/4 but edges are soft wide open and are sharpest at f/5.6 - f/8
- CA ~0.8px wide open at the edges
- vignetting 2.65EV
- 3.7% barrel distortion
- good flare control
-
- weak image quality on the edge of full frame
- pronounced astigmatism and visible coma in the corners - thus not a great lens for astrophotographic landscapes of the Milky Way - the Samyang is much better for this and far cheaper
-
- far less distortion than Canon EF 16-35mmL II, Nikon's 14mm f/2.8 or 14-28mm f/2.8 lens
photo/canonef14mm.txt · Last modified: 2015/09/20 11:04 by gary1