Canon RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USMSample Images Intro New Good Bad Missing Specifications Performance Compared R1 R3 R5 II R5 R5C R6 III R6 II R6 R R8 RP R7 R10 R50 R50V R100 Bodies Compared RF Lenses EF Lenses Flash Canon RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM (82mm filters, 32.8 oz./931g, 2.3'/0.7m close focus, 0.26× macro ratio, $1,899). bigger. I got mine at B&H. I'd also get it at Adorama, at Crutchfield or at Amazon, or get it used if you know How to Win at eBay. This 100% all-content, junk-free website's biggest source of support is when you use those or any of these links to my personally approved sources I've used myself for way over 100 combined years when you get anything, regardless of the country in which you live — but I receive nothing for my efforts if you take the chance of getting it elsewhere. Canon does not seal its boxes in any way, so never buy at retail or any other source not on my personally approved list since you'll have no way of knowing if you're missing accessories, getting a defective, damaged, returned, dropped, incomplete, gray-market, store demo or used lens — and my personally approved sources allow for 100% cash-back returns for at least 30 days if you don't love your new lens. I've used many of these sources since the 1970s because I can try it in my own hands and return it if I don't love it, and because they ship from secure remote warehouses where no one gets to touch your new lens before you do. Buy only from the approved sources I've used myself for decades for the best prices, service, return policies and selection.
February 2025 Better Pictures Canon Reviews Mirrorless RF Lenses EF Lenses Flash All Reviews
Sample Images topSample Images Intro New Good Bad Missing Specifications Performance Compared More samples throughout this review at Bokeh, Falloff, Macro, Spherochromatism and Sunstars. These are just snapshots; my real work is in my Gallery. These are all shot hand-held as NORMAL (▟ stairstep icon) JPGs; no tripods, FINE (quarter circle) JPGs or RAW CR3 files were used or needed. Downtown San Diego and the Embarcadero as seen from Harbor Island's Coasterra on a Gray Day, 1:17 PM, Sunday, 10 September 2023. Canon EOS R8, Standard Picture Style with sharpening set to 7,1,1 and Saturation to +4, RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM at f/5 at 1/500 at ISO 50, +0.3 stops exposure compensation (LV 14.6), Perfectly Clear (now sold as Radiant Photo). bigger or camera-original 24 MP © 10 MB JPG FINE (quarter-circle icon) file.
Mercedes S580, 6:57 PM, Monday, 11 September 2023. Canon EOS R8, Standard Picture Style with sharpening set to 7,1,1 and Saturation to +4, RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM at f/2 hand held at 1/160 at Auto ISO 400 (LV 7.4), Perfectly Clear (now sold as Radiant Photo). bigger or camera-original 24 MP © 5 MB JPG NORMAL (▟ stairstep icon) file.
Hamilton Lancaster Grandfather Clock Face, 12:55 PM, Wednesday, 13 September 2023. Canon EOS R8, Standard Picture Style with sharpening set to 7,1,1 and Saturation to +4, RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM at f/2.8 hand held at 1/160 at Auto ISO 100 (LV 10.4), Perfectly Clear (now sold as Radiant Photo). bigger or full resolution 24 MP © 5 MB JPG file (file size reduced from camera original JPG NORMAL file.) This is shot with distortion correction OFF and is an extreme test, with straight lines parallel to the edge. All the distortion goes away with Distortion Correction ON. It's ultra sharp even hand-held here for a quick shot of my clock. Even shot off the cuff focus is dead-on and you can see the halftone dots in the moon phase artwork. In fact, I'd never seen the artist's signature on that artwork in person; I only first saw it here in this photo!
Mercedes S580, 6:58 PM, Monday, 18 September 2023. Canon EOS R8, Standard Picture Style with sharpening set to 7,1,1 and Saturation to +4, RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM wide-open at f/1.8 hand held at 1/160 at Auto ISO 1,250 (LV 5.4), Perfectly Clear (now sold as Radiant Photo). bigger or camera-original 24 MP © 4.3 MB JPG NORMAL (▟ stairstep icon) file. What makes this lens stand out isn't just the soft background bokeh. Skilled eyes will appreciate the lack of spherochromatism, which often leads to green color fringes on the out-of-focus chrome highlights towards the rear of the car. It's unusual and good that the out-of-focus highlights remain neutral and natural, rather than tinged with green. It's also great that Image Stabilization makes it trivial to hand-hold at dusk without any worries about sharpness. If I was paying attention I would have shot at 1/50 and a lower ISO for even better results, but this, like much of my work, is real-world grab shots. Introduction topSample Images Intro New Good Bad Missing Specifications Performance Compared
Even though it's an expensive chunky lens, it's so good that it's nearly impossible to find almost a year after it was announced. To get yours, do as I did and just order it and be patient.
I got my RF 135mm f/1.8L IS USM at B&H. I'd also get it at Adorama, at Crutchfield or at Amazon, or get it used if you know How to Win at eBay.
New intro top
Good intro top
Canon RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM. bigger.
Bad intro top
Missing intro top
Specifications topSample Images Intro New Good Bad Missing Specifications Performance Compared
I got my RF 135mm f/1.8L IS USM at B&H. I'd also get it at Adorama, at Crutchfield or at Amazon, or get it used if you know How to Win at eBay.
Camera & Extender Compatibility specifications topThis lens only works on Canon's EOS-R series of mirrorless cameras.
Name specifications topCanon calls this the RF135mm f/1.8 L IS USM:RF: Works only on Canon's EOS-R Mirrorless cameras. L: Expensive as L. IS: Image Stabilization. USM: UltraSonic (autofocus) Motor.
Optics specifications topCanon RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM Internal Optical Construction. UD elements. IS section. 17 elements in 12 groups. 2 UD extra-low dispersion elements, which help reduce secondary axial chromatic aberration.
Super Spectra and Air Sphere anti-reflection coatings.
Diaphragm specifications topRF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM. bigger.
Electronically actuated. Stops down to f/22.
Filters specifications top
Coverage specifications topFull-frame and APS-C.
Angles of View (Full Frame) specifications top18º diagonal. 15º horizontal. 10º vertical.
Autofocus specifications topNano USM (UltraSonic Motor). No external movement as focussed, so no air or dust is sucked in.
Focus Scale specifications topNo.
Infinity Focus Stop specifications topNo. You have to focus somehow to get precise focus at infinity, just like at every other distance.
Depth of Field Scale specifications topNo. Not on lens, but may be displayed in-camera.
Infrared Focus Index specifications topNo.
Close Focus (distance from subject to image plane) specifications top2.3 feet (0.7 meters).
Maximum Reproduction Ratio specifications top1:3.85 (0.26×).
Image Stabilizer specifications topRated 5.5 stops improvement; actually gives about 4.5 stops in the real worked, which is superb! Rated 8 stops improvement if your camera also has in-body stabilization.
Caps specifications topCanon E-82II front cap, included. Rear Lens Dust Cap RF (p/n 2962C001), included.
Hood specifications topThe plastic ET-88B hood is included.
Canon RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM with ET-88B Hood. bigger.
Case specifications topLP1319 suede-like sack included.
Size specifications top3.51" ø maximum diameter × 5.13" extension from flange. 89.2 mm ø maximum diameter × 130.3 mm extension from flange.
Weight specifications top32.840 oz. (931.0 g) actual measured weight. Rated 33.0 oz. (935 g).
Quality specifications topCanon RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM. bigger.
Announced specifications topWednesday, 02 November 2022.
Promised for specifications topLate January 2023. As of September 2023 it's still nearly impossible to get. You have to order it and be patient.
Included specifications topLens. Canon E-82II front cap. Rear Lens Dust Cap RF (p/n 2962C001).
Canon's Model Numbers specifications topProduct code: 5776C002 (5776C001 in Japan). Model number: RF13518LIS. JAN code: 4549292-207385.
Price, U. S. A. specifications topFebruary 2025 ($200 off)$1,899 at B&H, at Adorama, at Crutchfield and at Amazon. About $1,525 used if you know How to Win at eBay.
September 2023$2,099 at B&H, at Adorama, at Crutchfield and maybe at Amazon. About $2,000 used if you know How to Win at eBay. As of September 2023 it's still nearly impossible to get. Do what I did to get mine: just order it and be patient.
Canon RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM. bigger.
Canon RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM. bigger.
Performance topSample Images Intro New Good Bad Missing Specifications Performance Compared
Overall Autofocus Manual Focus Breathing Bokeh Distortion Ergonomics Falloff Filters Flare & Ghosts Lateral Color Fringes Lens Corrections Macro Mechanics
I got my RF 135mm f/1.8L IS USM at B&H. I'd also get it at Adorama, at Crutchfield or at Amazon, or get it used if you know How to Win at eBay.
Overall performance top
Autofocus performance top
As a fast tele the focus is immediate, but not instantaneous. It takes a moment to glide its focus in and out.
Manual Focus performance topManual focusing is entirely electronic; the manual focus ring isn't connected to anything other than a digital encoder.
How to get manual-focus override.
Focus Breathing performance topFocus breathing is the image changing size as focused in and out. It's important to cinematographers that the image not breathe because it looks funny if the image changes size as focus gets pulled back and forth between actors. If the lens does this, the image "breathes" by growing and contracting slightly as the dialog goes back and forth. The image grows somewhat as focused more closely.
Focus Distance Recording performance top
I read this in the lower left of my screen in Photoshop's lens correction filter.
Bokeh performance top
Here are photos from headshot distance wide-open. I'm focused on the DAVIS logo. Click any for its © camera-original file: Made-in-U. S. A. Davis 6250 weather station, 10:05 AM, Saturday, 09 September 2023. Canon EOS R8 at 1/2,500, 1/1,000 and 1/250 at ISO 50, 0, +0.3 and +0.3 stops exposure compensation (LV 14.0, 15.0 and 15.0). Click either for the © camera-original file. As always, if you want to throw the background as far out of focus as possible, shoot at f/1.8 and get as close as possible. As with all lenses, if you shoot from farther away, backgrounds don't get as far out of focus: Mercedes S580, 6:57 PM, Monday, 11 September 2023. Canon EOS R8, Standard Picture Style with sharpening set to 7,1,1 and Saturation to +4, RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM at f/2 at 1/160 at Auto ISO 400 (LV 7.4), Perfectly Clear (now sold as Radiant Photo). bigger or camera-original 24 MP © 5 MB JPG NORMAL (▟ stairstep icon) file.
Distortion performance topThe RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM has minor pincushion distortion with Distortion Correction OFF (as you can see exaggerated with the extreme example of the clock face at Sample Images), and none with Correction ON. While Canon's own software probably also corrects this from RAW CR3 files, be warned that other brands of raw processing software probably won't correct the distortion. Use these corrections in Photoshop's lens correction filter to uncorrected images. These aren't facts or specifications, they are the results of my research that requires hours of photography and calculations on the resulting data:
© 2023 KenRockwell.com. All rights reserved.
Ergonomics performance top
Other than being a handful, ergonomics are great. The additional front control ring is a feature common to many Canon RF lenses. You can set it in your camera to be Exposure Compensation, Aperture, ISO or other things. You can pay Canon service to remove the clicks from the front control ring. I prefer them with the clicks as shipped. It also has two programmable Lens Fn buttons, which default as AF Lock. You can program these in your camera to do other things. There are two buttons, one for vertical and the other for horizontal shots. They each do the same thing; you can't program to do different things. It has both AF/MF and STABILIZER switches: Canon RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM. bigger.
Falloff performance topFalloff on full frame is invisible with correction at its default of ON. If you shoot raw data rather than JPG images, whatever software you use to create visible images from raw data may or may not correct the distortion as is done in-camera as JPGs. You're on your own there; I don't bother with raw data. I've greatly exaggerated the falloff by shooting a gray field and placing these on a gray background; it will not look this bad in actual photos of real things, and it's till pretty much invisible here:
If you're silly enough to go out of your way to turn the correction OFF or need it for creative effect, falloff is strong wide open and goes away by about f/2.8. Again, gray-on-gray exaggerates this:
Filters, use with performance topThere's no need for thin filters. I can stack quite a few standard 82mm filters with no vignetting at any setting on full-frame. Go ahead and use your standard rotating polarizer and grad filters.
Flare & Ghosts performance top
See examples at Sunstars.
Lateral Color Fringes performance top
|
| % Perfectly Sharp Shots, unstabilized R8 | 1s |
1/2 |
1/4 |
1/8 |
1/15 |
1/30 |
1/60 |
1/125 |
1/250 |
1/500 |
| Stabilization ON, day 1 | 0 |
0 |
? |
67 |
50 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
| Stabilization OFF, day 1 | 0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
17 |
0 |
17 |
83 |
100 |
| Stabilization ON, day 2 | 17 |
33 |
50 |
67 |
83 |
83 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
| Stabilization OFF, day 2 | 0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
17 |
0 |
17 |
58 |
100 |
100 |
| Stabilization ON, day 3 | 3 |
0 |
25 |
33 |
83 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
100 |
| Stabilization OFF, day 3 | 0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
0 |
50 |
100 |
100 |
I see a 4½ stop real-world improvement.
Without stabilization I need to shoot at 1/250 to get perfect tripod-equivalent sharpness almost of the time, while even on an unstabilized camera I can get the same perfect results most of the time at 1/15 to 1/30, and loads of perfectly sharp shots at 1/8 or even 1/4 depending on luck. Shot a few frames at the slower speeds for insurance and you can almost always get perfect sharpness in one good shot out of a few at 1/4 or 1/8. Bravo!
With a 9-bladed rounded diaphragm, I get pretty good, sharp 18-pointed sunstars on brilliant points of light at most apertures.
Click any to enlarge:
Click any to enlarge.
In the case above the disc of the sun is so big that you can't see how sharp are the star points.
Here's a blinding point of light; the sun reflected off chrome car trim:
Click any to enlarge.
With point sources the stars are sharp. This is great performance.
Sample Images Intro New Good Bad Missing
Specifications Performance Compared
I got my RF 135mm f/1.8L IS USM at B&H. I'd also get it at Adorama, at Crutchfield or at Amazon, or get it used if you know How to Win at eBay.
Canon EF 135mm f/2 L (72mm filters, 0.9m/3' close-focus, 25.0 oz./708g, get it used at Amazon or used at eBay if you know How to Win at eBay).
The Canon EF 135mm f/2 L has also always been an extraordinarily sharp lens with superb bokeh. It has much more spherochromatism than this new RF 135mm f/1.8 L and won't quite be as sharp wide-open for scientific and astronomical use, however for portraits it's superb. It has no optical stabilization.
It works flawlessly on mirrorless with an EF to RF adapter.
It's smaller and lighter and less expensive than any of the other similar lenses today, so if you want this for people, beauty, environmental and , by all means pick up this well-loved classic for a song and laugh all the way to your bank!
Sony FE 135mm f/1.8 GM (82mm filters, 33.5 oz./950g, 2.3'/0.7m close focus, check price).
The Sony FE 135mm f/1.8 GM is almost identical in size, weight, features, extreme optical performance and price. Actually it's uncanny how close they are, even though the internal optical designs are quite different.
A huge advantage to this Canon Lens is that is has optical stabilization,
sorely lacking in the Sony, and that
Sony dumped production to China while Canon makes this lens domestically in Japan.
Each only works best on its own brand of camera, so it's actually a bit silly to compare — but you asked, so here you go.
Nikon NIKKOR 135mm f/2 AI-s (72mm metal filter thread, built-in hood, 30.1 oz./854g, 4¼'/1.3m close-focus, get it used if you know How to Win at eBay).
Nikon has nothing similar today for their mirrorless cameras, at least as of September 2023.
You could use the AF DC-NIKKOR 135mm f/2 D, however
Nikon's FTZ and FTZ II adapters are defective by design so unfortunately this AF lens won't autofocus on Nikon's mirrorless cameras.
Your best bet is the great AF-S 105mm f/1.4, which will autofocus on the FTZ and FTZ II, but lacks optical stabilization. It's faster but shorter.
You also can use the excellent classic manual-focus NIKKOR 135mm f/2 F, AI or AI-s on an adapter, but it won't have any data communication or optical stabilization with any brand of mirrorless camera. The NIKKOR 135mm f/2 F, AI or AI-s is still sought after today for its extraordinary bokeh, however wide-open it won't be as extraordinarily sharp as the newer lenses.
The NIKKOR 135mm f/2 F, AI or AI-s is smaller than the others, and just a little bit lighter, and it's 100% made out of engraved metal, an object of beauty that should need nothing more than a cleaning and relubrication every few decades or so to last forever.
Sample Images Intro New Good Bad Missing
Specifications Performance Compared
I got my RF 135mm f/1.8L IS USM at B&H. I'd also get it at Adorama, at Crutchfield or at Amazon, or get it used if you know How to Win at eBay.
Canon RF 135mm f/1.8 L IS USM. bigger.
AF: Autofocus, and maybe manual or manual override if you set your camera that way.
MF: Manual focus, only.
By default, there is no always-responsive instant manual-focus override as we take for granted in our DSLRs.
EOS R cameras need a menu setting changed for manual-focus override, otherwise the focus ring is always ignored in AF.
Find the "Lens electronic AF" option in your AF menu (AF 6 in R7, R8 and R10, AF 4 in EOS R5 and EOS R6 or CAMERA 8 in EOS RP), and set it to either "One‑Shot‑> enabled" or "One‑Shot‑> enabled (magnify)."
Canon should have it set this way by default, but they don't. No big deal now that I figured it out.
In ONE SHOT mode manual focus now takes over and stays wherever you set the focus manually, however in SERVO mode this setting lets the lens focus manually as you turn the ring, but as soon as you stop turning the ring the AF system takes back over and keeps tracking focus! Oh well.
I always leave this ON, except if I'm on a tripod.
Sample Images Intro New Good Bad Missing
Specifications Performance Compared
I got my RF 135mm f/1.8L IS USM at B&H. I'd also get it at Adorama, at Crutchfield or at Amazon, or get it used if you know How to Win at eBay.
Most people get very excited about this lens for headshots, but I don't: I prefer a zoom like the RF 100-500mm as I do headshots at a longer distances with longer focal lengths. 135mm is great for full-body shots, however I'd never shoot at f/1.8 because so little is in focus; if the subject is at an angle you're not going to get both eyes in focus at f/1.8, so I prefer zooms because I prefer their flexibility and don't fret the slower speed.
For astronomical and scientific use this lens is optically superb at every aperture.
I use a clear (UV) protective filter instead of a cap (exactly like an iPhone) so I'm always ready to shoot instantly. I only use a cap when I throw this in a bag with other gear without padding — which is never. The UV filter never gets in the way, and never gets lost, either.
The very best protective filter is the 82mm Hoya multicoated HD3 UV which uses hardened glass and repels dirt and fingerprints. The Nikon NC 82mm is also an excellent choice, but not as resistant to the environment, fingerprints and physical abuse as the HD3 UV.
For much less money, the Hoya multicoated 82mm UV is also optically superb, but the Hoya HD3 is the toughest.
Any of these filters protects as well and gives ultrasharp images, but since filters last a lifetime, you may as well get the best since the Hoya HD3 is tougher and stays cleaner than the others since it repels oil and dirt.
The Nikon 82mm Polarizer is superb.
All these filters are just as sharp and take the same pictures, the difference is how much abuse they'll take and stay clean and stay in one piece. Since filters last a lifetime or more, there's no reason not to buy the best as it will last you for the next 40 years. Filters aren't throwaways like digital cameras which we replace every few years, like it or not. I'm still using filters I bought back in the 1970s!
I got my RF 135mm f/1.8L IS USM at B&H. I'd also get it at Adorama, at Crutchfield or at Amazon, or get it used if you know How to Win at eBay.
This 100% all-content, junk-free website's biggest source of support is when you use those or any of these links to my personally approved sources I've used myself for way over 100 combined years when you get anything, regardless of the country in which you live — but I receive nothing for my efforts if you take the chance of getting it elsewhere. Canon does not seal its boxes in any way, so never buy at retail or any other source not on my personally approved list since you'll have no way of knowing if you're missing accessories, getting a defective, damaged, returned, dropped, incomplete, gray-market, store demo or used lens — and my personally approved sources allow for 100% cash-back returns for at least 30 days if you don't love your new lens. I've used many of these sources since the 1970s because I can try it in my own hands and return it if I don't love it, and because they ship from secure remote warehouses where no one gets to touch your new lens before you do. Buy only from the approved sources I've used myself for decades for the best prices, service, return policies and selection.
Thanks for helping me help you!
Ken.
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04 Feb 2025 typos, 08-15, 18 September 2023