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Front and rear views of a Canon EF50mm f/1.4 USM. The EF 50mm lenses are a group of normal prime lenses made by Canon that share the same focal length.These lenses are based on the classic double-Gauss lens, [1] with the f/1.8 being a standard six-element double-Gauss with an air gap and powers between element 2 and 3 [1] and its faster cousins adding additional elements. [2]
The Sigma 50mm f / 1.4 EX DG HSM is a normal prime lens made by the Sigma Corporation. The lens is produced in Canon EF mount , Four Thirds System , Nikon F-mount , Pentax K mount , Sigma's own SA mount , and the Sony/Minolta AF Mount varieties, all have the same optical formula.
The Samsung NX-mount is the lens mount used on NX series mirrorless interchangeable lens cameras by Samsung. The mount was first implemented in the Samsung NX10 , and Samsung initially referred to the NX line as 'hybrid digital cameras', citing their combination of attributes of both DSLR and compact cameras.
In 1987 Canon was the first to use USM (Ultrasonic Motor) with the Canon EF 300mm f/2.8L USM. [19] In 1989 Canon was the first to create a full frame f/1.0 AF (AutoFocus) lens and the only one until today with the Canon EF 50mm f/1.0L USM. In 1993 Canon was the first to create an interchangeable 10× superzoom lens for SLR cameras.
The TS-E 50 mm f / 2.8L MACRO was the first lens from Canon which combining Macro and tilt-shift. It was announced together with a series of lenses, the TS-E 90 mm f/2.8L MACRO and the TS-E 135mm f/4L MACRO, which introduced the same features.
Suitable adapters (from EF to M or from EF-S to M) are made by Canon as well as third party manufacturers. As is common with mirrorless systems, the adapter solution is not backwards-compatible with Canon's DSLR cameras: this means that you cannot put M lenses on a non-M DSLR. [1] The EOS EF-M system was discontinued in October 2023. [2]
The Canon FD 55mm ƒ/1.2 AL is a camera lens made by Canon, first introduced alongside the Canon F-1 single-lens reflex camera in March 1971. It was the first lens for any 35mm SLR system to incorporate an aspherical element. [1] The lens was manufactured until 1980.
The Canon T50, introduced in March 1983 and discontinued in December 1989, was the first in Canon's new T series of 35mm single-lens reflex cameras compatible with Canon's FD lens mount. SLR sales were falling in 1983 from the market's 1981 peak, and Canon chose to try greater automation to revive sales and remain competitive.