Canon ae-1 program zoom lens


















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Discount Sale Today Only! Rating Required Select Rating 1 star worst 2 stars 3 stars average 4 stars 5 stars best. Review Subject Required. Comments Required. The aspects of photography comprise architecture, casual use, travel, street, portraits, and landscapes. This is the most frequently found focal length that is combined with the Canon AE-1 Program.

The lens is well balanced, small, and light. Depending on the version of the lens, it will weigh between g. If you want the lightest lens, buy a new FD version.

It costs more than the f1. The "new FD" variant is the newest and lightest out of the choices. This lens is bulky, heavy, and difficult to focus lens.

Shot wide open, photographs will be soft. There are 2 versions, both are pricey. Optical quality is not the driver of cost. The original appeal was to get the view finder to be as bright as possible in low light conditions. If you favor other focal lengths, here are some other alternatives. Expect to spend more than you normally would for a 50mm lens with an equivalent aperture.

A popular focal length for street photography is 28mm. However, the most widespread use for wide-angle lenses are architectural and landscape photography. In terms of price, the relationship is easy to understand. The greater the field of view, the less affordable the lens will likely be. Lenses with larger apertures also go for substantially more.

The weight will vary based upon the qualities of the lens. You can get lenses from g to g. Faster apertures will also mean that those lenses will physically be large and will make the camera more difficult to hold.

The 85mm lens wasn't as widely used in when the AE-1 Program was originally distributed. Rather, the mm focal length was the first choice for a lens for portraits.

For shooting portrait photos with the Canon AE-1 Program, there are a variety of short telephoto lenses to select among. As all the Canon FD telephoto lenses are manual focus, they are much more compact than modern versions. It will probably cost more and is not a good choice for portraits as it should be stopped down. You will be required to search through a great number of results for third-party mm lenses that definitely are not anywhere near as good as a Canon lens.

This is a variety of 85mm lenses to pick from. The convenience of pairing a Canon AE-1 Program with a zoom lens is appealing. Being able to use a range of focal lengths without having to swap a lens is nice.

The 2 recommended macro camera lenses were built by Komine in Japan. The lens was also sold under different brand names. Elicar, Quantaray, Panagor, Spiratone, and Rokunar are brands you may find on a copy of the lens.

For photographing at macro magnification , the 90mm lens will probably be the better pick since it has a greater working distance. When you want to replace the lens, line the two dots up and turn the ring clockwise as far as it will go. Some Canon made lenses had what was called the new FD mount. To mount these, one lined up the red dots and turned the entire lens barrel clockwise. To dismount, one pushed the button on the lens barrel and turned counter-clockwise. Everything Ben wrote is absolutely correct, one thing I would like to add is that for most Nikon users, the confusing part is that on the "old" FD mount the kind with a ring there is no release button of any sort.

That is probably what is baffling you, you are looking for some sort of release before you rotate the lens or a part of it. Like Ben wrote, on most 3rd party lenses and the original Canon FD there is no such beast - it is a matter of turning a ring until it is snug to mount the lens, and conversly, you just undo that "snugness" by turning it counter-clockwise looking from the front. It should let go fairly easily after the initial tightness. All the buttons arouns the lens mount are for if I recall correctly for stopping down the apperture, and I believe for actuating the meter without pressing the shutter button or is that just on the AE1 NOT-program?

I forget now! So, just grab the ring closest to the camera body, give it a firm twist to the left, and there you are! Thank you both for your help.



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