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Photography and Canon Basics

My Canon Camera

Mounts

Canon uses two main types of lens mounts for its interchangeable-lens cameras: EF Mount (for DSLRs) and RF Mount (for mirrorless cameras).

FeatureEF MountRF Mount
Introduced19872018
Designed ForDSLR Cameras (with mirrors)Mirrorless Cameras (no mirrors)
Flange (Sensor-to-Mount) Distance44mm20mm (shorter for compact design)
Communication Pins812 (faster data transfer)
CompatibilityEF & EF-S lensesRF, RF-S, and EF (with adapter)
Autofocus PerformanceFast (older tech)Faster and more precise
Typical CamerasEOS 5D, 6D, 90D, Rebel seriesEOS R, R5, R6, RP, R10

NOTE

EF lenses can be used on RF mounts via an adapter, but RF lenses cannot be used on EF mounts.

This is because RF lenses are designed to sit closer to the sensor (thanks to mirrorless design), and EF bodies (which have mirrors) can't support that. The EF-to-RF adapter, on the other hand, simply fills that space gap and maintains communication between the camera and lens on RF camera bodies.

Sensor Size

Canon cameras mainly come in two sensor formats: Full Frame and APS-C (Crop Sensor). Each affects how your photos look, how lenses behave, and how much light the camera can capture.

The APS-C sensor is smaller and so it captures a smaller portion of the image projected by the lens.

A 50mm lens on a Canon APS-C camera gives a field of view equivalent to an 80mm lens on a Full Frame camera.

FeatureFull Frame SensorAPS-C (Crop) Sensor
Size36mm × 24mm (same as 35mm film)~22.3mm × 14.9mm
Crop Factor1.0x (no crop)1.6x (zooms in slightly)
Field of ViewWiderNarrower (due to crop)
Low-Light PerformanceBetter (larger pixels)Moderate
Depth of FieldShallower (better subject isolation and blur)Deeper (more image in focus)
Camera ExamplesEOS R5, R6, 5D Mark IVEOS R10, R50, 90D, Rebel T8i
Ideal ForProfessional work, landscapes, portraitsTravel, wildlife, beginners

NOTE

  • Full Frame lenses (EF/RF) can be used on both Full Frame and APS-C bodies.
  • APS-C lenses (EF-S/RF-S), however, can only be used on APS-C cameras because they project a smaller image circle that doesn’t fully cover a Full Frame sensor — this would result in dark corners (vignetting).

Image Stabilization

Image Stabilization (IS) reduces blur from camera shake — crucial when shooting handheld, especially in low light or at long focal lengths. Canon uses different stabilization systems across its cameras and lenses.

TypeDescriptionFound InWorks WithProsCons
Optical IS (Lens-based)Physical movement of lens elements to counteract shakeMany EF & RF lensesAny camera bodyReliable, no image quality lossAdds cost & weight to lenses
IBIS (In-Body Image Stabilization)Sensor shifts to compensate for movementEOS R5, R6, R7, R8, etc.All lensesWorks even with non-stabilized lensesCan increase body size/cost
Digital ISSoftware-based stabilization (cropping & correction)Mostly in video modeAny lens or cameraUseful for handheld videoSlight loss of image quality due to crop

TIP

The best results come when Optical IS and IBIS work together, offering up to 7–8 stops of shake reduction in some Canon mirrorless models.

Exposure Triangle

TBD

Modes

TBD

Topics to Cover

  • VND filter
  • Focal Length
  • USM, STM, VCM, Nano USM, L Series
  • Macro lens
  • Telephoto lens
  • Zoom lens
  • Fish Eye lens
  • Astro Photography
  • Weather-sealed
  • Drip Resistance