Chase Jarvis Chase Jarvis
  • Photos
  • Projects
  • About
  • Blog
  • Book
Chase Jarvis Chase Jarvis
  • Photos
  • Projects
  • About
  • Blog
  • Book
Canon 24mm f/3.5 TS-E II

LENSTOPIA – The 5 Top Lenses For Your Camera, Part I: Canon

So you just dropped an entire month’s pay on a super nice camera body. Ok. Take a breath. That was a big jump, and we want you making smart moves going forward. Yes, the lens is important. And yes, you can spend 10x what you just spent on a body on good glass. But before you go cashing in that 401k to buy one of each (dear god don’t), soak in the knowledge below. We shoot almost EVERY camera brand for one thing or another. Nikon for stills. Canon dSLR for video. Hasselblad for high end studio / fashion, etc etc. So my video guru Erik, yours truly, and my gear editor pal Sohail decided to put together a little series of blog posts. Over the next weeks we will break down the top lenses from several manufacturers, with an eye on application. If you know what kind of photography you want to do [or are already doing], there’s a great lens or two for you.
—-
Update: Here’s the Nikon lens post. Here’s the Hasselblad lens post. Here’s the Mirrorless and Micro 4/3 lens post.
—-

“Which lens should I buy?” is a question I get just about as often as “which camera should I buy?”, and in both cases, I respond with the same two words: “It depends.”

Yet despite that rote answer, there are a few standouts from each major manufacturers that can be cited as their “top” lens. We’ve had the (somewhat dubious) privilege of using pretty much all of them, and we’re going to present the five best lenses for each platform we use on a frequent basis. This is a four-part series, and we’ll be publishing them in the following order:

  1. Canon
  2. Nikon
  3. Hasselblad
  4. Mirrorless cameras, including Micro 4/3, Sony E-mount, and Fuji X-mount.
That said, we’re starting today with Canon – our default dSLR video rig but you can consider the below advice for stills too.

Canon

100mm f/2.8L IS Macro

Canon 100mm f/2.8L IS Macro

Canon 100mm f/2.8L IS Macro

This is perhaps my favorite single lens of all time. When the folks over at DPReview did a review of this lens, this was the first sentence of their conclusion:

Just occasionally a lens turns up which delivers such implausibly good results in our studio tests that I have to go back and repeat everything, double checking all settings to make sure I haven’t done something wrong.

This lens really is that good. You start with a hybrid Image Stabilization system that compensates for horizontal and vertical shifts as well as lens direction, then throw in an 9-bladed rounded iris that makes for dope bokeh. Add optics that give you the some of the most razor-sharp images you can imagine, and you have a knockout combination.

And if you’re looking for a good portrait lens at the same time as a solid Macro offering, look no further; the 100 L Macro makes for an tidy portrait lens as well.

Buy it here.
Borrow it here.

Image from a work in progress series of still lifes. Shot with a 5D Mark III and a 100mm f/2.8L Macro. © Sohail Mamdani

Image from a work in progress series of still lifes. Shot with a 5D Mark III and a 100mm f/2.8L Macro. © Sohail Mamdani

 

85mm f/1.2L USM

Canon 85mm f/1.2L

Canon 85mm f/1.2L

The “Magic Canonball” [sic] as it’s come to be known, is perhaps one of the most popular portrait lenses, ever. If you’ve got the coin to drop on it, the Canon 85mm f/1.2L has some of the creamiest bokeh we’ve seen. It’s also one of the largest 85mm lenses outside of the Zeiss or Canon Cine versions. That front element even makes the posers look like pros.

Sohail once wrote of this lens, “You could shoot a portrait in front of a dumpster and as long as you shot it at f/1.2 or f/1.4, all you’re going to see is some soft, blurry shapes in the background that give no indication that you’re in that nasty alley behind your local convenience store.” That’s completely true, but be aware of one thing: I’ve often gotten a subject’s eyelashes in perfect focus, while their irises are soft. Be aware.

Then why would you buy an f/1.2 lens? Because, to quote my homie Zack Arias, “The optics in faster lenses are ‘typically’ much better than in the slower lenses. f13 can still yield a better image from a pro fast lens than a slow kit lens. Not all lenses are equal once you get past f8.”

Buy it here.
Borrow it here.

Canon 24mm f/3.5L TS-E II

Canon 24mm f/3.5 TS-E II

Canon 24mm f/3.5 TS-E II

Tilt-shift lenses are strange ducks, but they are, without a doubt, some of the coolest lenses to play with. I used to shoot action sports with them in the early 2000’s and it would blow the minds of art directors and editors everywhere. Get to know them well and you’ll find yourself using them for all kinds of things you didn’t know you could pull off with them. (But don’t overuse them or you’ll be “that guy/gal”

That said, it’s not the Canon 24mm f/3.5L TS-E II’s tilt-shift functionality that we love this lens for (though have used that extensively). We dig it because it is one of the sharpest 24mm optics that Canon puts out. And that makes it a go-to landscape lens on the Canon platform as well. It’s fun. Even wide-open, the lens is tack-sharp. Close the aperture down a bit and you’ll kill the tiny bit of purple fringing in your stars overhead, and sharpen up that image even more. Then use the shift functionality to ensure against converging lines and viola! You’ve got a killer combo in your hands.

One last thing to keep in mind here – this is a manual-focus lens, as most tilt-shift lenses are. Bad eyesight? Get glasses or pass on this sucker.

Buy it here.
Borrow it here.

Taken with a 5D Mark II and 24mm f/3.5 TS-E II lens

Taken with a 5D Mark II and 24mm f/3.5 TS-E II lens

 

Canon 24-70 f/2.8L II

Canon 24-70mm f/2.8 Mark II

Canon 24-70mm f/2.8 Mark II

While it was certainly a workhorse, the original Canon 24-70mm f/2.8 was getting long in the tooth, and enjoyed a love-hate relationship with many a photographer. On the one hand, it was the ideal mid-range zoom, had a fast aperture, and was the first lens most photographers, pro and aspiring, bought. On the other hand, it suffered from less-than-stellar optics (compared to the current crop of lenses from Canon) and was notoriously soft in the corners. When Canon announced the new version of the 24-70, the first thing that hit most folks was sticker shock. The lens retailed for a groan-inducing $2300 (street price), far more than its original counterpart. Worse, there was no image stabilization included, despite the high price. Add to that the fact that Tamron had just introduced a 24-70 f/2.8 with Vibration Compensation for about half the price, and the photographic community was ready throw rotten tomatoes at Canon’s money-grubbing tactics.

After the fervor settled down and folks started to realize that the optics on this new lens weren’t “pretty good” they were “Superb, almost flawless -DPreview.” This was born out by even the simplest of tests – shooting an Edmunds resolution chart with the old and new models side-by-side. People began to rave about the build quality, the flare resistance, the quick and accurate focusing, and sure enough, Canon turned what could’ve been a liability into a new legend.

Buy it here.
Borrow it here.

Canon 600mm f/4 II

Canon 600mm f/4 II

Canon 600mm f/4 II

Got about $13,000 lying around? That’s how much this baby from Canon is going to set you back (though of course, you could rent it for a lot less).

But for those needing a long, fast lens (wildlife photographers, for example), this is about as good as it gets in the Canon lineup. Pair it with a 1Dx and you’ve got what is easily one of the finest long lens combos we’ve ever had the pleasure of playing with. It’s a good 3 lbs lighter than the Mark I version of this lens, which honestly does make a good bit of difference when you’re lugging this down a rough path to get to that perfect vantage point. Moreover, Canon has improved the autofocus speed and accuracy on this lens. On tests with the 1Dx and the 600mm Mark II, Sohail shot about six or seven bursts of between 8 to 17 shots each, and each time, I’d have no more than one shot out of focus. For someone who photographs birds more as an amateur passion, getting this sort of accuracy is nothing short of remarkable.

This is, no doubt, a specialty lens, and requires a few accessories to go with it, such as a sturdy tripod, a gimbal head, and a fast camera at the small end. But get all those in place, and the first time you fill your frame with a swooping bird as it comes in for a landing, or a tiny hummingbird hovering in mid-air, and you’ll find that it’s well worth the cost and hassle.

Buy it here.
Borrow it here.

Great Egret touchdown. Shot with a 1Dx and a Canon 600mm f/4 II

Great Egret touchdown. Shot with a 1Dx and a Canon 600mm f/4 II

That’s it for this edition of Lenstopia. In the next installment, we’ll take on the best Nikon has to offer.

—

Gear provided by BorrowLenses.com – where still photographers and videographers can rent virtually everything.

Check out these creative classes I've curated + built that relate to this post:

Fundamentals of DSLR Filmmaking
with Victor Ha
Fundamentals of Photography
with John Greengo
Landscape Photography
with Marc Muench

Related Posts

44 replies on:
LENSTOPIA – The 5 Top Lenses For Your Camera, Part I: Canon

Comments navigation

Next
  1. Melissa- Continuum Weddings says:
    November 22, 2013 at 6:11 pm

    The 85mm is my go to lens… it’s pretty great. I’ve also heard good things about the Sigma 85mm

  2. Daniel Rodriguez says:
    November 22, 2013 at 2:15 pm

    If we talk of a real Lenstopia we have to talk about 50mm f1.0 more than a 85mm f1.2, and a 1800mm than a 600mm. Those are really epic lens, and of course the 70-200mm f2.8 IS USM II. Personally i love too the 8-15mm because its unique fish lens zoom capability!!!

  3. runbei says:
    November 22, 2013 at 10:54 am

    Hey Chase, this is way too Canonical a list for me – will look forward to your review of Nikon glass. For my (lack of) money, a photographer on a budget could make do quite wonderfully with just three Nikkor lenses, assuming a full-frame sensor: 20mm/2.8, 24-70/2.8, 80-200/2.8. I found those three lenses stupendously useful when I worked in sports and journalism. (Now carry a pocket Sony.)

  4. Michael Comeau says:
    November 22, 2013 at 10:43 am

    I stopped reading at ‘dope bokeh’.

    1. Chase says:
      November 22, 2013 at 6:38 pm

      So I take it you didn’t like the tongue in check vernacular :-/. Sorry u missed it or it wasn’t even more blatant. (More than 1000 posts on this blog and never said that word before cause I hate it so much

      1. Moses says:
        November 23, 2013 at 12:53 am

        Hey Chase, you don’t really need to be sorry for the words you used just because someone feels offended by something mild like dope. You can’t please everyone and I feel you have every right in the world to express yourself in whatever words you deem fit. Heck you even used “fuck” in your one of your shows and we’re all cool about it 🙂

    2. Tim Roper says:
      November 23, 2013 at 4:51 pm

      I was actually stoked to hear about the dope bokeh.

      1. James Ogle says:
        May 30, 2014 at 5:31 pm

        I’ve got it and have to say the the bokeh is indeed Dope as.

      2. Peter says:
        June 7, 2014 at 7:28 am

        You were stoked to hear about the dope bokeh, BRO.

  5. Chase says:
    November 22, 2013 at 10:02 am

    No love for the sharpest DSLR lens on the planet? The Canon 70-200 MKII?

    1. Colin says:
      November 22, 2013 at 10:35 am

      Tough to exclude the 70-200 f2.8, the workhorse zoom in everyone’s bag… but I’m not sure which I would knock off the list. I doubt I could narrow it down to just 5!

      1. Chase says:
        November 22, 2013 at 6:36 pm

        Out of pocket here… But we ruled out the 70-200 2.8 because, even while this post is relative (ie all canon) we think the Nikon version is so much stronger we though we ought not drop it here… Looking at some other lenses where canon glass truly stands out (even from itself)

        1. Chase says:
          November 25, 2013 at 7:13 am

          Not starting a brand war, Im really curious to see the thoughts on the Nikon 70-200 2.8. Its always seems darker and less contrast to me, but Im open to hearing and looking at it.

        2. Alex says:
          December 29, 2013 at 3:12 pm

          Weird that you’re saying that because from the tests i’ve seen the canon beats the nikon in image quality plus its minimum focus distance is way smaller which is really important IMHO. Note that I haven’t used any and think both brands are great.

Comments navigation

Next

Comments are closed.

BUY NEVER PLAY IT SAFE NOW!

Get weekly, curated access to the best of everything I do.

Popular Posts

Héctor García and Francesc Miralles smiling, with bold text in the center reading '4 Steps to Discover Your True Purpose' on a black background. Framed with a yellow border, creating a high-contrast, engaging design.Why You’re Not Finding Your Purpose
20241111_CJLIVE_MarthaBeck_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Curiosity, Creativity, and Purpose: Can They Really Defeat Anxiety?
A shattered red clock with broken glass pieces flying outward, symbolizing the concept of breaking free from traditional time management constraints. The image is paired with the bold yellow text: 'The Chase Jarvis LIVE Show' with the word 'Show' crossed out, suggesting a redefinition of the format.Time Management Is Dead—Here’s What Actually Works
Chase Jarvis in mid-conversation, gesturing with his hands, wearing a casual maroon t-shirt. The background appears to be an indoor space with wooden beams on the ceiling and soft lighting. On the left side, a bold yellow and black graphic reads "THE CHASE JARVIS LIVE SHOW," with each word stacked in a column. The scene conveys an energetic and engaging atmosphere, with Chase passionately explaining something to the person in front of him.The Secret to Lifelong Creativity (Hint: It Doesn’t End After Your 20s)
20240828_CJLIVE_AustinKleon_PODCAST_16x9Why Embracing Discomfort Can Transform Your Art
WHY TAKING SMALL STEPS TOWARD BIG RISKS CAN TRANSFORM YOUR LIFEWhy Taking Small Steps Toward Big Risks Can Transform Your Life
20241121_CJLIVE_SandraMatz_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Can Big Data Really Predict What You’ll Do Next?
20241219_CJLIVE_AaronLeventhal_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Beyond Midlife: How Can ‘The New Fit’ Guide Your Health Journey?
20250204_CJLIVE_AmieMcNee_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Stop Waiting for Permission to Create—Here’s How to Start
20250224_CJLIVE_AreYouOnTheRightPath_Micro_Thumb_16x9_v2.5Overwhelmed by Doubt? Here’s How to Quiet the Noise and Trust Yourself

Daily Creative Projects

© 2024 Chase Jarvis. All rights reserved.