08-15-2013 06:42 PM
I have a Canon 6D Full frame camera. And I just bought the 24- 70 L II USM lens.
To complete my kit, I'm looking to invest a super wide zoom ( as low as 10 going uptil 22/ 24 mm) and super telephoto above 70 mm going uptil 300 mm (both preferably L series USM, with wide openings along the full focal range)
Before I make the purchases I want to be sure which lenses do NOT have the problem of vignetting AT ALL.
I am okay with barell distorition on the wide. But vignetting is something I want to totally avoid.
All you experienced folks out there, please guide me. Would also appreciate any links to lists that enumerate the same.
Alternatively I am also open to using prime lenses, but they are really low on my preference.
Appreciate your time and response.
08-15-2013 08:41 PM
You'll need to look to Sigma for a zoom that wide but it's 12-24 and not super fast. For the 70-300 Canon makes a very nice L which gets good reviews but I don't know if it has any vignetting on the wide end.
08-16-2013 08:28 AM
"I want to be sure which lenses do NOT have the problem of vignetting AT ALL"
Not trying to change your mind but you do know this is an east fix in PS or LR5?
08-16-2013 06:45 PM
@Vatsala wrote:
I am okay with barell distorition on the wide. But vignetting is something I want to totally avoid.
For discussion sake: Just about all lenses have a bit of vignetting, especially when going wide. Most of the time you can't really tell unless you have a big bright colored section (such as the sky). But it can be cleaned up in post without any noticable artifacts, and programs light LR will do it on import if you wish. You're not going to be able to get near 10 mm on a FF without some level of dimming.
08-17-2013 01:39 PM
In most software that allows you to add in some vignetting, you can also subtract it.
Some apps have lens profiles so they know how much vignetting occurs with that specific lens and at various focal lengths.
But you can also do this manually. In astro imaging we calls these images "flats". The purpose of a "flat" is to determine how much vignetting there is in an image so that we can correctly adjust for it using a program like Photoshop.
To create a "flat" you would cover the lens with a piece of white translucent fabric. Put some light on the fabric so that the fabric itself is evenly lit. This means the view through the camera is basically just an all-white field with no contrast or features. Then take a photo (it doesn't matter that the camera cannot focus on the fabric.)
What you'll get is an all-white image typically brighter in center and dimmer toward the edges but the image can be used to measure the lens' specific vignetting (and in the case of a zoom that level of vignetting would vary by focal length.) The image can be used as a reference image with software to completely eliminate vignetting.
A photographer would normally not go to such extremes to get a perfectly flat field (lighting wise), but astro-imagers have to do this as a matter of routine.
08-26-2013 05:36 AM
Hi Tim
Thanks for your elaborate response. Good to know about the detail with the astro photography context.
Can you talk a little about the apps for lens profiles? Is there any free/ inexpensive download available?
Appreciate the help,
Vatsala
10-03-2013 11:11 PM
I was having trouble deciding the same thing so I rented the 16-35 L II and the 8-15mm L Fish eye. I chose the fish eye yes there is plenty of distortion due to it being a fish eye but that effect can be toned down in software. As far as the Super telephoto I agree the 70-300L pictures are great I just wished I never waited so long to purchase them.
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