{"id":10136,"date":"2016-04-26T07:30:00","date_gmt":"2016-04-26T17:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/suggestionofmotion.com\/?p=10136"},"modified":"2016-02-11T12:30:14","modified_gmt":"2016-02-11T22:30:14","slug":"sametop-lens-adapter-canon-fd-sony-nex-review","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/suggestionofmotion.com\/blog\/sametop-lens-adapter-canon-fd-sony-nex-review\/","title":{"rendered":"Build a Set of Affordable Full-Frame Lenses for the Sony a7S II with this $13 Adapter"},"content":{"rendered":"
Awesome glass at an affordable price is not just a fantasy.<\/p>\n
At $3K, the Sony a7S II is not a cheap camera. On top of that, your selection of native full-frame is rather limited and all cost a pretty penny. For example, Sony’s 55mm f\/1.8 prime lens costs nearly $1,000<\/strong>.<\/p>\n Thrifty Fifty<\/em>? Not really.<\/p>\n <\/a><\/p>\n Instead of dropping a cool grand on a single lens, you could pick up an adapter for your existing lenses at a fraction of the cost. This is the power of a highly-adaptable camera like the a7S II– buy your lenses once and use them on your current and future cameras with the aid of a simple adapter.<\/p>\n If you don’t have any existing lenses, you can still build a solid set of lenses for video production without even approaching the cost of a single native lens from Sony by picking up some vintage Canon FD<\/strong> lenses and an adapter.<\/p>\n You can get lens adapters are for virtually any lens mount, but finding an affordable adapter that also performs well can prove to be difficult. Cheap adapters are plentiful, but they’re frequently more trouble than they’re worth due to poor build quality or a lack of quality control.<\/p>\n I tested several budget-friendly E-Mount adapters for Canon FD lenses, and for only about $13, I was happy to discover that Sametop’s Canon FD to NEX adapter<\/strong> provides a very solid way to shoot with Canon FD lenses on E-mount cameras like the Sony a7S II.<\/p>\n More information \/ Check current price<\/a><\/p>\n<\/div>\n <\/a><\/p>\n You may be familiar with Canon’s modern EF-mount lenses, but Canon’s older FD-mount lenses are definitely worth a look as well. The FD mount was Canon’s standard lens mount for nearly 20 years until it was replaced by the EF mount in 1987.<\/p>\n Optically, FD lenses were awesome, but the EF-mount was the way forward for Canon, offering modern amenities such as autofocus, in-camera aperture control, and image stabilization. As such, FD lenses became “legacy lenses”– defunct and abandoned– left to collect dust in closets as their optical prowess faded from memory.<\/p>\n Until now.<\/p>\n Thanks to the short flange distance of Sony’s E-mount, mirrorless cameras like the a7S II can use virtually any lens– including FD lenses– with the aid of a simple adapter.<\/p>\nJust the Stats Ma’am<\/h2>\n
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Canon…FD?<\/h2>\n