$345.65 + $9.60 shipping

In Stock. Sold by OneCall
 

or
Sign in to turn on 1-Click ordering.
 
 
Express Checkout with PayPhrase
What's this? | Create PayPhrase
More Buying Choices
Add to Cart Adorama Camera
$349.00 + Free Shipping
In Stock

Add to Cart Calumet
Add to cart to see price. Why?  + $12.00 shipping
In Stock

Add to Cart 17th Street Photo
$357.00 + $11.95 shipping
In Stock


Have one to sell? Sell yours here
 
   
Canon EF 50mm f1.4 USM Standard & Medium Telephoto Lens for Canon SLR Cameras
 
See larger image and other views
 

Canon EF 50mm f1.4 USM Standard & Medium Telephoto Lens for Canon SLR Cameras

Other products by Canon   See collection 
4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (291 customer reviews) More about this product

In Stock.
Ships from and sold by OneCall.
33 new 5 used from $329.00

Frequently Bought Together

Customers buy this item with Tiffen 58mm UV Protection Filter

Canon EF 50mm f1.4 USM Standard & Medium Telephoto Lens for Canon SLR Cameras + Tiffen 58mm UV Protection Filter
Price For Both: $358.04

These items are shipped from and sold by different sellers. Show details

  • This item: Canon EF 50mm f1.4 USM Standard & Medium Telephoto Lens for Canon SLR Cameras

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by OneCall.
    $9.60 shipping.

  • Tiffen 58mm UV Protection Filter

    In Stock.
    Ships from and sold by Amazon.com.
    Eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over $25. Details


What Do Customers Ultimately Buy After Viewing This Item?

Canon EF 50mm f1.4 USM Standard & Medium Telephoto Lens for Canon SLR Cameras
66% buy the item featured on this page:
Canon EF 50mm f1.4 USM Standard & Medium Telephoto Lens for Canon SLR Cameras 4.6 out of 5 stars (291)
$345.65
Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 II Camera Lens
19% buy
Canon EF 50mm f/1.8 II Camera Lens 4.5 out of 5 stars (1,071)
$99.99
Canon EF 85mm f/1.8 USM Medium Telephoto Lens for Canon SLR Cameras
5% buy
Canon EF 85mm f/1.8 USM Medium Telephoto Lens for Canon SLR Cameras 4.8 out of 5 stars (128)
$364.99
Canon ES71II Lens Hood for EF 50mm f/1.4 SLR Lens
5% buy
Canon ES71II Lens Hood for EF 50mm f/1.4 SLR Lens 4.2 out of 5 stars (40)
$34.94

Technical Details

  • 50mm standard lens with f/1.4 maximum aperture for Canon SLR cameras
  • 2 high-refraction lens elements and Gaussian optics help eliminate astigmatism
  • Delivers crisp images with little flare at the maximum aperture
  • Extra-small Micro USM focus adjustment and full-time manual focusing
  • Measures 2.9 inches in diameter and 2 inches long; 1-year warranty
  See more technical details

Product Details

  • Product Dimensions: 2.9 x 2 x 2 inches ; 10.2 ounces
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Shipping: Currently, item can be shipped only within the U.S.
  • ASIN: B00009XVCZ
  • Item model number: 2515A003
  • Average Customer Review: 4.6 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (291 customer reviews)
  • Amazon.com Sales Rank

    Popular in these categories: (What's this?)

    #6 in  Camera & Photo > Accessories > Film Camera Accessories
    #6 in  Camera & Photo > Lenses > Digital Camera Lenses
    #6 in  Camera & Photo > Lenses > SLR Camera Lenses
  • Date first available at Amazon.com: March 22, 2006

Product Description

Amazon.com Product Description

The 50mm f/1.4 standard lens is a terrific choice for both casual and professional photographers. The lens is outfitted with two high-refraction lens elements and new Gaussian optics, which combine to eliminate astigmatism and suppress astigmatic difference. As a result, the lens obtains crisp images with little flare even at the maximum aperture. The lens's f/1.4 speed, meanwhile, is perfect for available-light shooting. And as a bonus, this lens is the only lens in the EF system to offer an extra-small Micro Ultra Sonic Motor (USM) while still providing a full-time manual focusing option. Other features include a close focusing distance of 1.5 feet, a 58mm filter size, and a one-year warranty.

Specifications

  • Focal length: 50mm
  • Maximum aperture: f/1.4L
  • Lens construction: 7 elements in 6 groups
  • Angle of view: 46 degrees
  • Focus adjustment: Overall linear extension system with USM
  • Closest focusing distance: 1.5 feet
  • Filter size: 58mm
  • Dimensions: 2.9 inches in diameter and 2 inches long
  • Weight: 10.2 ounces
  • Warranty: 1 year

Product Description

Canon offers this standard lens featuring superb quality and portability. Two high-refraction lens elements and new Gaussian optics eliminate astigmatism and suppress astigmatic difference. Crisp images with little flare are obtained even at the maximum aperture.

Buy This Product and Related Accessories

Canon EF 50mm f1.4 USM Standard & Medium Telephoto Lens for Canon SLR Cameras
345.65
$399.99 $345.65
Select this Item
  • Most Popular
  • Service Plans
  • Filters
  • Cleaner
  • Cases
See all accessories

Customers Who Bought This Item Also Bought


Product Ads from External Websites(What's this?)
Sponsored Content

Tags Customers Associate with This Product

 (What's this?)
Click on a tag to find related items, discussions, and people.
 
(115)
(88)
(77)
(73)
(46)

Your tags: Add your first tag
 

 

Customer Reviews

Average Customer Rating
4.6 out of 5 stars (291 customer reviews)
5 star:
 (216)
4 star:
 (52)
3 star:
 (11)
2 star:
 (6)
1 star:
 (6)
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
Share your thoughts with other customers:
Most Helpful Customer Reviews

 
1,937 of 1,954 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Why spend more?, March 15, 2005
With the 50mm f1.8 lens available for less than a hundred dollars, why spend so much more to get the f1.4? The answer is, you may not need to. It all depends on your seriousness, budget, and how long you need your lens to last.

If you want a "starter lens" for shooting at 50mm (or with prime lenses in general), the f1.8 would be a great buy. 50mm is a very useful and intuitive focal length to spend some time with, because it sees the world at the same distance as your naked eye (regardless of your camera's crop factor). So you could buy the f1.8 cheaply, regard it as a "play with it" lens, and get a nice introduction to "prime lens quality." The f1.8 will seem like a substantial step up from kit lenses and most consumer-priced zooms, and amazing bang for few bucks.

So if the f1.8 is such a great bargain, why would the f1.4 be among Canon's most all-time popular lenses? It's that the f1.8 can take the great shot within certain conditions, but the f1.4 delivers within a much wider range of conditions. In other words, "You get what you pay for," and we'll save the best for last.

Affordable-but-Solid Contruction: The f1.4 will likely have a much longer life than the cheaper plastic build of the f1.8, and retain more resale value. It's an investment, rather than a commodity. And it'll be more certain on your camera and in your hand. (My first one finally needed some calibration, after 80,000 shots and extreme wear-and-tear from frequent swapping with my other primes.) Users sometimes report the front glass falling out of their f1.8s. For the f1.4, the main issues revolve around the Micro USM focus motor, which is not as sturdy as true USM.

Focus Versatility: The f1.4 lets your camera autofocus, and then lets you tweak further by hand without flipping a switch - that's called "Full-Time Manual Focus." The f1.8 requires switching back and forth between auto and manual focus. The f1.8 is famously noisy/buzzy during autofocus, has a bare-minimum focus ring, and no distance scale. The f1.4 will autofocus more reliably, especially in dim light, though it will fail occasionally when starved.

Resistance to Abberation: Chromatic abberation (fringe colors) and barrel distortion are evident-but-low for both lenses at wide apertures - that's "prime lens quality." But in comparison tests, the f1.8 is more susceptible to vignetting (shadows around the corners), halation (glowing around the highlights), and lens flare. For instance, lens flare within the f1.4 tends to be more tightly controlled - "in focus" - whereas a bright light source is more like to blow out the whole shot in the f1.8. All these factors improve when stopped down, but lag about a stop behind the f1.4.

Color: However, if the f1.8 catches up at f/8 to the f1.4 by many standards, it rarely catches up to the f1.4's saturation. The f1.4 has "proper-to-strong" color richness at all but the widest apertures, while the f1.8's shots are much more likely to require postwork. (I do, however, get better saturation from my 24mm f2.8 and 100mm Macro f2.8. The 50 f1.4's saturation seems good-not-great by comparison.)

"Headroom": The engineering of both lenses lets you choose the tradeoff between "most possible light" or "most possible clarity." It's by design that you can choose "more light for less crisp," or stop down for sharpness. *Samples vary*, but the average 50mm f1.4 should consistently "get down to sharp" more quickly, "sharp enough" by f/2.0, "very very sharp" by f/2.8 (often exceeding the professional 24-70mm f2.8 L when wide open), and delivering "unreal sharp" by f/4. (I saw insane "specks of mascara sharpness" at f/3.5 from my first f1.4.) Again, the f1.8 will probably lag about a stop behind that curve.

My second 50mm f1.4 performed even better than my first, right out of the box, "marginally sharp" at f/1.4 and increasingly beyond reproach by f/1.8-2. (At f/1.4-1.6, it suffers only from halation and some light fall-off in darker areas.) So if extreme sharpness is necessary for you, shop with a strategy that will let you return your lens or get it calibrated if not up to your needs. My guess is that my first one was more typical out of the box, but it approached the performance of the second after calibration.

(It's also worth noting that the premium-priced 50mm f1.2L is drastically more sharp (and better performing generally) at wide apertures, but *less* sharp at f/2.8 through f/8. The f1.4 is a better "walkaround" performer than the f1.2L lens that costs four times as much.)

Regarding light return specifically, my own experience in lens-swapping baffled me, until I read other reports that the f1.4 exposes a third of a stop brighter than most other Canon lenses. It's brighter in the viewfinder generally, and really IS a whole stop "faster" than the f1.8 at maximum apertures (i.e., the same net exposure at half the shutter speed). If you're willing to sacrifice some clarity, that extra stop can make a huge difference when you're challenged by moving targets in low light.

(For instance, shooting "wide open" for performers in dim venues. Faster shutter for less motion blur. More light for better color. And the edges may be soft at 100% magnification, but *relatively* clear compared to the out-of-focus background. That "illusion of clarity" isn't as likely to print very well, but resizes very snappily for the web.)

So the f1.8 can certainly produce some stunning images, particularly in general daylight photography OR tightly-controlled conditions OR stopped down, but is less adaptable to challenging circumstances that the f1.4.

"The Best for Last...":

Now, with both these lenses, you get the advantage of marvelously wide aperture, which can be used for a tight focal plane that lets the background (or foreground distractions) fall quickly out of focus. This is of course a cornerstone of creative photography, and both lenses give you plenty to explore. (In practice, even f/2.8 delivers a pretty shallow depth of field in close-up shots, so these wider lenses give you even more room to play.)

However, there is such a thing as "blur quality," called "bokeh," based on the number of aperture blades within the lens. The f1.8 has five, and the f1.4 has eight. The f1.8 will portray out-of-focus lights more pentagonally, the f1.4 more roundly. (In focus, those same lights will be eight-pointed stars with the f1.4, ten-pointed with the f1.8 - odd numbers of blades double the number of points.) But most importantly, the blur from the f1.8 can be rather "choppy," especially at wide apertures, while the f1.4's is consistently more "buttery smooth."

In other words, there's more to quality than sharpness - there's also quality where your shot is LESS than sharp. And this is where the f1.4 becomes "a favorite lens" for some people, even at over three times the price of its diminuitive counterpart.

Make no mistake, the f1.8 would make an excellent "starter" lens. But the f1.4 is an exceptionally *serious* lens. Are you still learning to love photography? Then $80 is a fine price to pay for a lens you might outgrow. Or do you already love photography? Then $300 is a worthy price for a true investment that will reliably pay off. So they're both bargains, just buy what's best for you.

(Addendum - Canon also sells a 50mm f2.5 Macro lens around $250. If you NEED macro, it's reportedly pretty good, and for general purpose as well. But it's a) not even as fast as the f1.8, b) more difficult to manually focus than the f1.4, and c) not as creamy in the bokeh, with six aperture blades instead of eight. And Canon's 100mm version is drastically more practical for macro work, and better performing generally. But the 50mm Macro does become a contender, at a "middle price," if what you really need is one decent lens to do as many different things as possible, though none of them as well.)
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews  
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


 
197 of 199 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A review for parents, August 23, 2006
By Matthew Davidson (Cambridge MA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
I bought this lens to take indoor portraits of my nine-month-old daughter using available light. I was tired of the harsh photos produced by the built-in flash on the Canon 20D or Digital Rebel. A bounce flash improves matters great deal, but I wanted to see what could be done with a fast lens.

The Canon 50mm 1.4 gobbles light. It opens up a world of indoor photography that is not possible with a 4.0 lens. The 50mm focal length combined with available light produces natural-looking results. It is exactly what your eye sees. Shadows and highlights are intact. It is a revelation if you're used to the harsh drop shadows and evenly-lit faces produced by flashes. This is a jarring step up in quality from snapshot to "wow"

As noted, focus is soft at /1.4 and begins to sharpen at /2.0 to /2.8. Not a bad thing, though. Some of my favorite pictures have been produced with the aperture wide open. The depth of field is so narrow at this point, that the subject's face is in focus, but the shoulders start to blur.

I use this lens with a 20D. The balance is perfect, the combination feels very professional and responsive. Operation is very simple. Move the camera into aperture priority mode (Av), look though the view finder and adjust the aperture until you see the shutter speed is faster than 1/30th a second (30).

I agonized over the 1.4 vs. the 1.8 versions of this lens. The additional stop does provide more shooting options. Often I'm shooting at the edge of acceptable shutter speed, and juggling both aperture and ISO. Many reviews comparing the two talk about build quality, focus motor speed/noise, etc, but the bottom line for me was the extra stop was totally worth it. If you want to shoot indoors without a flash, get the 1.4. If you simply want a nice sharp lens at this focal length, the 1.8 is for you.

As a father, my only regret is I wish I had this lens earlier. From one parent to another, I'll tell you the price of the lens is irrelevant, as the pictures it produces are priceless.

Now, go make a backup of your photo library.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews  
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No


 
282 of 293 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars EXCELLENT - At a price, November 10, 2004
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This 50mm is amazing. I truly love it. I debated a long time between the 1.8 and the 1.4. In the end, I figured I'd never replace it again so get the 1.4. I love it - the images it makes are staggering. Still - it's pricy compared to the 1.8 - but not to L series lenses. I think it's worth it. I read online it had barrel distortion wide open - and it does if you really study the image - but that's perfectly OK with me for the 1.4 shallow depth of field. Normal people will never see that at all. One drawback you may not think of is that beautiful wide open 1.4 aperture is not available to you if there is much light. It's so fast it's easy to overexpose - even with 1/4000th of a second shutter. It takes awesome portraits - awesome landscapes. This is a must have lens in every EOS owner's bag. Don't get the 1.8 and wish you got this one. Get this one and start taking great photos.
Help other customers find the most helpful reviews  
Was this review helpful to you? Yes No

Share your thoughts with other customers: Create your own review
 
 
 
Most Recent Customer Reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars Still harnessing its power, but I like the power it has
I'm new to the DSLR world. I use this lens with my Canon T1i which I bought at Christmas. All I can say at this point is the just like moving from point-and-shoot to DSLR was a... Read more
Published 1 day ago by B. Lucas

4.0 out of 5 stars Great lens
Bought this lens for the Canon 7d. I've loved it so far. For me, the price and quality represented a good midpoint between the 50mm 1.8 and 1. Read more
Published 3 days ago by BryantScott

5.0 out of 5 stars Awesome Lens - Tack Sharp - Unhappy with the f/1.8
I bought this lens after being frustrated with the 50mm f/1.8 lens. I purchased the 50mm f/1.8 last year to get pictures of our newborn in low light. Read more
Published 4 days ago by J. Bashor

5.0 out of 5 stars My new favorite lens
I've never used a prime lens before, but I've read for years that using one will take your photography to whole new level, and this lens has. Read more
Published 14 days ago by Destructo

2.0 out of 5 stars Not a well built lens - disappointed
I purchased this lens [...] few weeks ago. I have a high expectation from this lens after reading
a lot of good reviews about it. Read more
Published 16 days ago by kel

5.0 out of 5 stars Sharp, fast lens
This is my first lens with an aperture below 3.5. It added new possibilities in terms of taking pictures in low light conditions. The shallow depth of field is amazing. Read more
Published 19 days ago by Tamer

5.0 out of 5 stars I recommend this lens to all my friends
I love this lens. New photographers ask me all the time what lens to get and this is the only one i suggest. Read more
Published 20 days ago by Brent R. Schnarr

5.0 out of 5 stars great lens at a great price
I got this lens with my new Canon 7D. I love the pictures it takes. Perfect portraits even in low light. Read more
Published 22 days ago by S. Condray

4.0 out of 5 stars Compact Lens on the Go
Love the light-weight feel of this lens and the short, compact body makes my overall camera feel smaller and easy to grab on the run. Read more
Published 27 days ago by Bennofer

1.0 out of 5 stars Poor quality
Very poor quality. It died on me twice, each time on an exotic trip - horribly disappointing! Both auto and manual focus stopped functioning. Read more
Published 1 month ago by A Thinking Man

Only search this product's reviews



Customer Discussions

This product's forum
See all 18 discussions...  
Start a new discussion
Topic:
First post:
Prompts for sign-in
 


Active discussions in related forums
Search Customer Discussions
   



So You'd Like to...


DPReview Says...

Come and explore latest digital photography and imaging news, reviews opens new browser window of the latest digital cameras and accessories, the most active discussion forums opens new browser window, and the most comprehensive database opens new browser window of digital camera features and specifications at dpreview.com opens new browser window
Digital Photography Review Logo

Product Information from the Amapedia Community

Beta (What's this?)


Look for Similar Items by Category

 

Feedback

If you need help or have a question for Customer Service, contact us.
 Would you like to update product info or give feedback on images?
Is there any other feedback you would like to provide?

Your comments can help make our site better for everyone.


OneCall Privacy Statement OneCall Shipping Information OneCall Returns & Exchanges


Your Recent History

 (What's this?)

After viewing product detail pages or search results, look here to find an easy way to navigate back to pages you are interested in.