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Canon TS-E 24mm f/3.5L Tilt Shift Lens for Canon SLR Cameras digital cameras, camcorders for sale
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Canon TS-E 24mm f/3.5L Tilt Shift Lens for Canon SLR Cameras
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Canon TS-E 24mm f/3.5L Tilt Shift Lens for Canon SLR Cameras List Price: $1,899.99
Our Price: $1,110.75
You Save: $789.24

Features
 EF mount; tilt shift lens
 Ultra-low Dispersion glass with Fluorite elements; aspherical lens
 24mm focal length
 f/3.5 maximum aperture
 Manual focus only
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Canon TS-E 24mm f/3.5L Tilt Shift Lens for Canon SLR Cameras Customer Reviews
  1  
♥♥♥♥♥ Excellent Lens, more manual skills needed
I have had this lens for a few days. I ordered it since I was tired of stitching bad photos by hand, and finding everything out of alignment. I do mostly indoor and outdoor architecture, and nature scenes, so needed something with both a panoramic sweep, and to maintain parallelism in my subjects.

The lens allows 11 degrees of shift to either side of center, and it rotates, so shift is either left/right, or up/down. Out to 5 degrees of shift, I am finding the auto settings are not too perturbed. After 5 degrees, some manual setting skill is needed. I will develop more of those soon, I can tell. The lens also allows tilt capabilities, which produce a nice selective focus effect, not unlike a lensbaby. I don't use much of that, but may do some portrait work with it.

The build quality of this lens is rock solid. The optics are very nice. I got a Hoya UV filter, and there is not much light loss, although I think there is some peripheral CA.

Straight through photos (no tilt/shift) are very sharp out to the edge, but this is a manual focus lens. For my work, I set it to infinity and that is no problem. For closer subjects, this could be challenging for someone with old eyes. A focusing screen is next.

I attached a photo above of the US Capitol. This was hand stutched in PhotoShop from two images shot 5 degrees left and right off center. ON A TRIPOD, of course. Note that there is no misalignment of the vertical lines in the Capitol building. In fact, the blend line goes between the first and second bays next to center on the left side of the center section of the building. Even knowing where this line was, I couldn't see it. The alignment and metering is so good that there is a couple along the curb in the lower left, and the woman turns between shots, and there is some double exposure effect, but she is right where she is supposed to be from the previous shot 10 degrees to the other side. The original image was more than 5' wide, so I had to shrink this one down for posting.

Definitely a special purpose lens, but if you want to do good architectural shots (to preserve paralellism) this is the best you can do without going to medium format. IMHO.
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