It costs a fortune (US$ 1100) and weighs a half-kilo. It's not sharp, being an
SLR ultra-wide-angle in addition to spreading its meagre resolution across a
medium-format image circle. However, you already know the TS-E lenses
tilt and shift, so you're probably
not wondering why anyone would buy one.
Physically its a solid chunk of iron with a narrow passage for light and glass
down the middle. I'd stand on it on a dare, no problem. The front element is
rather big and exposed, though not as bad as the Canon 14mm's that look like
glass softballs. The lens volume doesn't change during focus, so it won't suck in
dirt and moisture. The lens front doesn't rotate. The manual focus feel is smooth
and heavy, nearly hydraulic. If I'm mugged my plan is to throw this lens at my
assailant's head as hard as I can, and I won't be suprised if the lens survives
longer than I do.
It has two tiny knobs for adjusting shift and tilt, two miniscule knobs that
lock the positions of the first pair, and a little chrome flipper near the mount
to allow rotating the lens 90 degrees either way, with detents every 30 degrees.
The joins in the body to allow the tilting and shifting are well-machined and I
don't expect much dust would enter the lens through them. Even if they did, the
joins are behind the rear optics, so I doubt any dirt would ever get between the
elements.
At f/3.5 it's not bright enough to really light up a split-circle focus aid.
You have to be precisely centered on the exit pupil to get both halves
illuminated. Also, the difference between in- and out- of focus on a wide-angle
lens at f/3.5 is hard to aprise merely through a normal laser matte screen.
Especially if you are used to having AF on and CF4 off on your EOS bodies, you
will waste alot of film out of habit. (Canon L lenses all autofocus silently, so
its easy to depress the shutter half-way, affirm that the viewfinder doesn't look
obviously out-of-focus, finish depressing the shutter on a fuzzy scene.)
The light fall-off is pretty intense wide-open and
shifted/tilted. Real photographers will use a graduated filter holder to
compensate. Fake photographers like me pretend its a feature. For aligned
verticals in architecture, you often shift way up, which darkens the top half of
the picture - the sky and the illuminated portion of the building - just as you
would want. For funky nite pix (Stadthaus and Fraumunster, right), you can shift
way down to get clown perspective - which darkens the ground half fairly
appropriately.
On the subject of focusing screens, Canon makes a grid screen for aligning
architectural subjects -- with no manual focus aid. When their architectural
lenses are manual focus only. You got to wonder what the hell which they expect
you to load into your EOS-1N. I use a split circle screen, and line up horizonals
on the autofocus squares. And curse Canon while doing it. Beattie/Intenscreen
make almost the screen you'd want - both a grid and split - but not for EOS.
(Ideally you'd want two splits so you could focus near/far compositions with
tilt, like Fuji makes for the GX-680's. Ideally you'd just want a GX-680.)
This lens' maximum field of view is about the same as a 12.5-15mm lens. You
only get to see about 1/4 of it at a time, but if you shift around, its all
there. At full shift, the rectilinear wide-angle distortion can make normal cubic
corners look like church spires. You also have to learn to enjoy looking at the
mount of any filters you use on it regularly while shifted. I use a 72->77mm
stepup with a Nikon wide-angle polarizer that itself is really like 85 or 90mm
(it kind of steps itself down to 77mm). And alot of slides feature an arched top
thanks to this.
The lens hood is vestigal at best, in order to avoid blocking the maximal
field of view. They could have made an asymetric hood that protected two or three
sides taking advantage that only 1/2 the picture at most can be accentuated. But
in practice you're outside, shifting up, so the top of the hood (where the
flare's coming from) would have to be the least-hooded side anyway. Depressing.
Also at 24mm/3.5, any dust on the front element will be alot nearer to in-focus,
so instead of lowering contrast undetectably, dirt will walk out of your
photo and introduce itself when illuminated by stray light.
The internal flare's not awful. In the night shot of Zurich's Fraumunster at
the beginning, you can see alot of flare - but this was something between 8 and
30 seconds into car headlights and high-intensity spots. Much less than that and
you won't see it. Note: the flare I'm talking about isn't the huge glow around
the lights. Thats the once-a-decade monster fog that
dragged me out of the house in the first place. Here, I'm referring to the lines
of tiny colored circles that stretch from a bright light source to the center of
the picture and past it. Look hard in this picture and they're there.
The little TS works with a Canon teleconvertor,
creating the world's worst 35mm f/5 or 50mm f/7 lens for only $1500. Shift is
also multiplied from 11mm (about 1/2 the verical picture) to 16mm and 22mm
respectively. I wish I had the attention span to determine whether the TC's are
any better than cropping in this case, but the accompanying bell tower is
obviously still recognizable (especially to KU alum...) If this was a full-frame
shot without the TC it would look as pointed as a steeple.
Ownership
The first thing to think about doing with your new TS-E is to send it right
back to Canon to have the tilt and shift put in the same plane. It ships so that
if the shift is up and down, the tilt is left and right. I think they converted
mine free, at the same time they were putting a thumbprint on the inside of the
front element of my 75-300IS . Actually I believe you
could do this yourself (the rotate, not the thumbprint). It sure looks like the
lens would cleanly seperate in two halves after the removal of four screws, the
halves only attached by a few wires for the diaphram. (If you try for yourself
I'm sure you'll take full responsibility for any ensuing shrapnel.)
I stopped carrying my 17-35L in lieu of the TS24, because I shoot mostly in
cities, rife with verticals that are either crying to be corrected or screwed up.
But I find that even in party pix, you can show the huge spread on the table from
a pot-luck dinner while rendering the verticals more-or-less accurately. In
general, I leave
the shift fully unlocked,
pushing the lens up and down by hand in lieu of daintily cranking it. I leave the
tilt locked and more or less alone. These locks do allow a bit of drift if you're
violent with the equipment, so keep an eye on them. It sucks hard to get home
from a night out shooting and see that its locked at 5 degrees.
In general I use the shift on about 80% of shots with this lens. I hardly ever
use tilt, because a 24mm wide-angle already has huge DOF (especially at smaller
apertures) when you want "everything in focus". The same factor limits the
applicability of tilting to limit focus; you can't easily blur anything to the
point of unrecognizability. A new-year's resolution is to try a bit harder on
both effects, though.
If you want to try macro , tilt should actually be very
handy to add or limit focus. Try the EF12 extender. The 25mm extender gives only
about a millimeter between closest and infinity focus, while the closeup lenses
will not have much effect (while simultaneously vignetting horribly - they're
quite thick and can't keep out of the way of the 138 degree maximal field of
view).
Plain Old Shots
Its always a normal 24mm lens when you want one. On the building on the left,
the floor that the view is centered on is verically centered in the picture.
Hence no shift. Darkened sky probably due to Nikon 77mm wide-angle polarizer
hanging on a step-up ring.
Alternatives
You'll prefer Canon's EF 17-35mm f/2.8L if you think like a press reporter,
and expect your subject run from three meters to one meter away and start kicking
you, while you attempt to maintain frame and focus. The zoom would help you a
bit, f/2.8 helps autofocus (so does having an autofocus motor), and the lens
won't suck in any dust if you use it with a thin-mount skylight and spittle
filter.
I'd love to try Canon's EF 24mm f/1.4L for nite-time hand-held shots; in a
city nightscape you could win with 1/45 sec and f/1.6 on 3200 film. I suspect you
could get a little arty blur with this lens, especially in macro shots with an
EF12 or maybe 500D.
Olympus made a 24mm shift lens which is rumored to be epsilon sharper. (I
doubt anyone could tell.) If you don't plan on taking the wide-angle shift with
you often, you might come out ahead if you find one cheap used including a body
to hold film onto the back of it with. As with the Nikons (following), shift is
apparently the same as Canon, at 11mm and autofocus isn't implemented.
Nikon makes both 28mm/3.5 and 35mm/2.8 shift lenses. These are both more
attractive angles of view to me. I often think of getting one of these 35mm's
along with an F-to-EOS adapter; together used the pair might run $500-600 (and
still focuses to infinity). You don't have tilt (at 35mm I'm sure it'd be useful,
shame) and the Canon automatic aperture - you get to stop these puppies down by
hand. I think you might find a crappy Nikon body cheaper than the F-to-EOS
adapter, but I don't have the attention span to get that close to owning two
systems. Either of these lenses could potentially knock the 24mm out of my heavy
bag.
Lastly, Canon makes a TS 45mm/2.8 lens. In principle this should be fine: no
wideangle distortion even fully shifted, sharper, brighter, blurry enough wide
open that tilt could save your focus or shatter it (if you play to lose). I
assume its as solidly built as the TS 24mm. The main thing against it is that I
don't think it would end up in my camera bag. Right now I carry just the 50/1.4
for night or in the backpack. My light bag is the 28-70/2.8 and 135L, and the
heavy bag is the 14/2.8, TS24, 28-70, and 70-200/2.8 and TCs. I don't see when I
would want the TS 45mm with me - maybe for hiking, to get some classic near-far
compositions of wildflowers and alps? Or if I had a product studio?
The surest shot for my optics purchasing dollar would be if Canon made an
autofocus (no technical reason not to) tilt-shift 35mm/2.8. Knowing its
real-world cousin, I'd confidently buy it on specs alone.
Where to Buy
The
TS-E
24mm is stocked by Adorama, a retailer that pays photo.net a referral fee for
each customer, which helps keep this site in operation.
What Next
Neil Gundel made a very
good page with many
actual illustrations of DOF control with tilt.
(c) Copyright 1999 Frank Sheeran. If you want to reuse it
in whole or portion, contact
the author.
Article created 1999
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