Canon is going wider — and faster — than ever on its RF mount.
The company today announced two new ultra-wide lenses aimed squarely at professional photographers and video shooters: the RF 14mm f/1.4L VCM, a bright prime designed for Canon’s growing hybrid lineup, and the RF 7–14mm f/2.8–3.5L Fisheye STM, a zoom that delivers an eye-bending 190-degree field of view.
Together, the launches signal Canon’s continued push to flesh out the RF system with specialized glass that leans just as hard into video as it does stills.
RF 14mm f/1.4L VCM: A low-light monster
The RF 14mm f/1.4L VCM becomes the sixth lens in Canon’s f/1.4L VCM series, which debuted in mid-2024. Like its siblings, the new lens is a hybrid tool, promising top-tier optics alongside quiet, video-friendly autofocus.
At 14mm, this is Canon’s widest f/1.4 lens ever. But physics is a cruel mistress: that massive brightness comes with some practical hurdles. The lens uses a large, bulbous front element, meaning you can forget about standard screw-on filters. Instead, you’ll have to rely on rear gelatin filters—a common, if slightly annoying, reality for ultra-wide glass.
Key Specs:
- Optics: 18 elements in 13 groups, including a rare fluorite element for better clarity.
- Video-Ready: Uses Canon’s voice-coil motor (VCM) for near-silent focus.
- Close-up: Focuses as close as 9.5 inches (0.24 meters).
- Price: ₹219,995.
Physically, the lens matches the rest of the VCM lineup, meaning video shooters can swap lenses on a rig without having to move their follow-focus gears. The only visual standout is the built-in petal-shaped hood—a first for this specific prime series.
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The RF 7–14mm Fisheye: Seeing 190 degrees of weirdness
If the 14mm prime seems extreme, Canon’s second announcement pushes things into the realm of the surreal.
The RF 7–14mm f/2.8–3.5L Fisheye STM is the successor to the old-school EF 8–15mm f/4L. At its widest setting, it captures a staggering 190-degree field of view. To put that in perspective: this lens can actually see slightly behind its own front element.
At 7mm, you get a circular “crystal ball” image. As you zoom in, it transitions to a more standard (but still very distorted) diagonal fisheye. Unlike its predecessor, this lens uses “equidistant projection.” In plain English, that means it renders subjects more consistently across the frame, which is a big deal for VR and 360-degree video creators who need to stitch images together.
Key Specs
- Weight: It weighs just 476 grams—lighter than the older EF version even before you add an adapter.
- Filters: It uses the same rear drop-in filters as Canon’s EF-to-RF adapters.
- Focus: It uses an STM motor designed to minimize “focus breathing” (that annoying zoom effect when you change focus during a video).
- Price: ₹152,995.
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Comparison: The New Glass vs. The EF Legacy
The jump from DSLR-era glass to these mirrorless optics is more than just a mount change. Canon is trading slower, heavier designs for faster apertures and specialized video features.
| Feature | RF 14mm f/1.4L VCM | EF 14mm f/2.8L II USM | RF 7–14mm f/2.8–3.5L | EF 8–15mm f/4L |
| Max Aperture | f/1.4 (2 stops faster) | f/2.8 | f/2.8 – 3.5 | f/4 |
| Field of View | 114° | 114° | 190° | 180° |
| Focus Motor | Dual VCM + USM | Ring USM | STM | Ring USM |
| Weight | ~578g | 645g | 476g | 540g |
| Special Features | Iris Ring, Fluorite | None | VR Equidistant Projection | Limit Switch |

Are these lenses for you?
These aren’t lenses for every hobbyist. They are niche, expensive, and specialized. However, they address a very specific gap in the market. While Sony has a 14mm f/1.8 and Sigma offers a 14mm f/1.4 DG Art, Canon’s VCM system is specifically built to unify the workflow between photo and video. By making the lenses the same size and weight as the rest of the series, Canon is trying to lock professional cinema houses into the RF ecosystem.
Neither lens will be a best-seller, but for the architectural photographer who needs every millimeter of a room, or the VR creator building immersive worlds, Canon is making it clear it doesn’t plan to hold back.
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