Choosing a Lens: Page 3

WDC Investigates lenses

Your easy guide to lens suffixes:

II/III
– Denotes version of lens
APO
– Apochromatic lens elements designed to produce sharper images by focusing all wavelengths of light to the same point
DG
– Sigma’s designation for digital and full-frame lenses
Di
– Tamron lenses designed for full-frame sensors
Di-II
– Tamron lenses compatible with APS-C sensors
DO
– Canon lenses featuring a diffractive optical element
DX
– Nikon lenses designed for APS-C sensors
ED
– Nikon lenses featuring Extra Low Dispersion element(s)
ED
– Olympus and Leica lenses with low dispersion glass
EF
– Canon lenses compatible with full-frame and APS-C-sized sensors
EF-S
– Canon lenses compatible with APS-C sized sensors
EX
– Sigma ‘excellent’ range of lenses
FE
– Canon’s fisheye lenses
G
– Nikon lenses without a manual aperture ring
HSM
– Sigma lenses with Hypersonic Motor
IF
– Internal focusing lenses
L
– Canon ‘Luxury’ range of lenses
LD
– Tamron lenses with Low Dispersion glass
MF
– Manual-focusing-only lenses
OS
– Sigma lenses with Optical Stabilisation
PRO
– Tokina Professional range of lenses
TS-E
– Canon’s ‘tilt and shift’ lenses
UD
– Canon lenses with Ultra Low Dispersion element(s)
VR
– Nikon lenses with Vibration Reduction
USM
– Canon lenses with an Ultrasonic Motor

 


This article has more pages: