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The EF 85mm lenses are a group of medium telephoto prime lenses made by Canon Inc. that share the same focal length. These lenses have an EF type mount that fits the Canon EOS line of cameras.

The 85mm f/1.8 (left) and the 85mm f/1.2L II (right)

This 85mm focal length is "perfect for portraiture" as labeled by Canon and practicing professionals, due to the focal length creating just the right perspective for both the subject and the background. The 85mm is most commonly used for head and shoulder type portraiture, upper torso portraiture and selective floral photography. It will commonly be found in the kits of photographers that shoot wedding, birthdays, and other events involving people. These photographers would also carry a 70-200mm for complementing the longer focal lengths and when extremely shallow depth of field is not needed.

EF 85mm f/1.2L USM

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The Canon EF 85mm f1.2L II USM, with its included hood in place

The EF 85mm f/1.2L USM is a professional L series lens. Canon markets it as their "definitive portraiture lens".

The lead optical engineer at Canon who led the design team for this lens was a fashion photographer, and his intention was to design a lens that would be the definitive lens for fashion photography. This required a completely new design that would take a new direction from Canon's previous 85mm lens designs. A new element was placed in the lens to give bokeh that was unlike any of the other lenses that fashion photographers had used before. This new large element required a new clutched electronic manual focusing mechanism that was only used on Canon's 50mm f/1.0 to handle the large specialized element. When it finally hit the market, it was the only lens in the industry that was explicitly designed for fashion photography.

It is the longer of the only two f/1.2 lenses Canon makes, the other being the 50mm f/1.2L USM. This lens is constructed with a metal body and mount, and with rubber gripping and plastic extremities. It features a wide rubber focusing ring and a distance window with infrared index.

Featuring a circular 8-blade diaphragm, and a maximum aperture of f/1.2, this lens is capable of maintaining sharpness and image quality at low apertures. The lens' depth of field allows distinct focus on the subject, while providing a beautiful bokeh. The optical construction of this lens contains 8 lens elements, including one ground and polished aspherical lens element, which makes this lens extremely sharp when stopped down to about f/2. This lens uses a floating front extension focusing system, powered by a ring type USM motor. Auto focus speed of this lens is on the slow side when compared to most ring USM lenses, and photographing fast moving targets can be quite challenging with this lens.[1] Manual focusing is done by wire: this lens does not have a direct mechanical connection to the focusing ring, but instead detects the rotation of the focusing ring and uses the autofocus motor to drive the lens elements. While full-time manual focus is available, the lens cannot be focused when the camera is off. The front of the lens does not rotate, but does extend when focusing.

EF 85 mm f/1.2L II USM

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The newer EF 85mm f/1.2L II USM version, which is aesthetically the same as the EF 85 mm f/1.2L USM, is updated with a newer CPU, 1.8 times faster autofocus, and upgraded anti-reflective lens coatings to reduce chromatic aberration, ghosting, and lens flare.[2] This lens was used prominently in the independent feature film Marianne which was shot using a Canon EOS 7D.

EF 85mm f/1.8 USM

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The EF mount for the f/1.8 and f/1.2L II lenses showing their wide apertures

The EF 85mm f/1.8 USM is a consumer level lens. It is the shorter sister to the EF 100mm f/2.0 USM, and is designed very similarly. It is constructed with a plastic body and a metal mount. This lens features a distance window with infrared index. An 8 blade, maximum aperture of f/1.8, gives this lens the ability to create depth of field effects. The optical construction of this lens contains nine lens elements, without any special lens elements. It uses an internal focusing system (meaning that the front of the lens neither rotates nor extends when focusing), powered by a ring type USM motor. Auto focus speed of this lens is very fast.

The plastic casing of the lens has changed over the lens's production. Starting with a smooth plastic (akin to early EOS cameras like the EOS 1000). Later the casing was changed to a textured matte plastic (much like the Canon EF 50mm f1.8 STM).

In addition to portraiture, the lens is also suited for indoor sports photography, particularly on a cropped sensor, due to its focal length, fast autofocus, and fast aperture, and for photos in social situations, due to its fast aperture (useful in dark interiors) and quiet operation (which minimizes disruption).

In terms of aberrations, the lens exhibits noticeable vignetting when used wide-open on full frame cameras, this is significantly reduced when used on a cropped sensor or when the lens is stopped down. The lens also generates purple fringing in high-contrast lighting, with subjects such as chrome, water, and black-and-white scenes.[3][4] These aberrations are corrected by some cameras.

EF 85mm f/1.4L IS USM

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The EF 85mm f/1.4L IS USM is the latest addition to this series. It was announced on August 29, 2017.[5] The lens has 1/3 of a stop less than the f/1.2 siblings, but the image stabilization gives sharp pictures with up to four stops' longer exposure. The f/1.2 versions thus have a slight edge in reduced depth-of-field and reducing subject motion blur, while the f/1.4 IS has a huge advantage in low light. [6]

Specifications

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Attribute f/1.2L USM f/1.2L II USM f/1.8 USM f/1.4L IS USM
Image        
Key features
Full-frame compatible   Yes
Image stabilizer   No   Yes
Ultrasonic Motor   Yes
L-series   Yes   No   Yes
Diffractive Optics   No
Macro   No
Technical data
Aperture (max-min) f/1.2 – f/16 f/1.8 – f/22 f/1.4 – f/22
Construction 7 groups / 8 elements 7 groups / 9 elements 10 groups / 14 elements
# of diaphragm blades 8 9
Closest focusing distance 3.1 ft / 0.95m 2.7 ft / 0.85 m 2.7 ft / 0.85 m
Max. magnification 0.11× (1:9.1) 0.13× (1:7.7) 0.13× (1:7.7)
Horizontal viewing angle 24°
Diagonal viewing angle 28°30'
Vertical viewing angle 16°
Physical data
Weight 2.25 lb / 1025 g 0.93 lb / 425 g 2.09 lb / 950 g
Maximum diameter 3.6 in / 91.5 mm 3.0 in / 75.0 mm 3.5 in / 88.6 mm
Length 3.3 in / 84.0 mm 2.8 in / 71.5 mm 4.15 in / 105.4 mm
Filter diameter 72 mm 58 mm 77 mm
Accessories
Lens hood ES-79II ET-65III ET-83E
Case LP1219 LP1014 LP1219
Retail information
Release date September 1989 March 2006 July 1992 August 2017
MSRP $ $1500 $2199 $430 $1599.00
Street Price $ $1700 $380
Used Price $ circa $200 (2019)

See also

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References

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  1. ^ Carnathan, Bryan. "Canon EF 85mm f/1.2 L II USM Lens Review". The-Digital-Picture.com. Retrieved January 27, 2012. The biggest downside to the original Canon EF 85mm f/1.2 L USM Lens was the very slow focusing speed. If you were shooting portraits, it didn't matter. But, a lens this fast begs to be used for indoor action sports.
  2. ^ Carnathan: "While this lens certainly has the aperture and image quality to be an excellent indoor action sports lens, the AF performance is only "good enough" in my opinion - and not yet matching the Canon EF 85mm f/1.8 USM Lens' AF performance. Would I use this lens for sports? Definitely, but I would plan on a lower hit rate - especially with the tiny depth of field at f/1.2."
  3. ^ Photozone
  4. ^ Default Canon 85mm f/1.8 Purple Fringing
  5. ^ "Canon U.S.A. Expands Its Lens Portfolio With The New Ef 85mm F/1.4l Is Usm Lens And Their First-Ever Macro Tilt-Shift Lenses". usa.canon.com. Archived from the original on August 29, 2017. Retrieved August 30, 2017.
  6. ^ "EF 85mm f/1.4L IS USM". usa.canon.com. Retrieved August 30, 2017.
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