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Switched from Canon to Sony

  
 
pgrillone
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p.1 #1 · Switched from Canon to Sony


# Why I Left Canon for Sony

People often ask me why I left Canon and switched to Sony.

Was it Sony's autofocus?

No.

Was it the color science?

No.

Was it the frame rate?

No.

The truth is much simpler.

I switched because of a lens.

Years ago, early in my photography career, I became fascinated by the Voigtländer 65mm APO-Lanthar f/2. At the time, it was only available for Sony. I loved everything about it. The build quality, the rendering, and the deliberate, hands-on approach it encouraged. It seemed perfectly suited to the kind of photography I wanted to create.

But I was still building a career. I needed reliable, efficient tools that would help me meet deadlines and serve clients. Manual focus wasn't practical for much of the work I was doing.

Then Canon released the R5.

Like many professionals, I made what seemed like the obvious choice. I switched systems and invested heavily in RF glass. Eventually I upgraded to the R5 Mark II and built a kit capable of handling any commercial assignment that came my way.

For a while, I was completely satisfied.

But over time, I became frustrated by Canon's decision to restrict third-party lens manufacturers from fully participating in the RF ecosystem. It felt limiting. There were lenses I wanted to use that simply weren't available.

And through all those years, I never stopped thinking about the Voigtländer 65 APO.

Then an opportunity appeared.

I accepted a position doing in-house commercial photography for a company that already owned a substantial Canon system. Every camera body, lens, and accessory I needed for production work was already available.

For the first time in years, I no longer needed my personal camera system to generate income.

I was free to choose equipment based on inspiration rather than necessity.

I sold my Canon gear.

Sony had just released the A7R VI, but instead of buying the newest camera, I purchased a new A7R V at a significant discount. With the money I saved, I finally bought the lens I had wanted for so many years: the Voigtländer 65mm APO-Lanthar f/2.

Soon after, I added the Voigtländer 35mm APO-Lanthar f/2.

My kit became remarkably simple.

One camera.

Two lenses.

No compromises.

People often ask if I use the Sony system at work.

The answer is both yes and no.

For high-volume production work, simple white-background product photography, and assignments where efficiency is the priority, I often use the company's Canon equipment. Those tools are optimized for speed and consistency.

But when a project allows me to slow down, experiment, and create something with a little more soul, I reach for the Sony and the Voigtländers.

Those are the projects that remind me why I became a photographer in the first place.

Today, at 66 years old and after more than twenty years working as a commercial product photographer, I've learned something I wish I understood earlier.

The best camera system isn't necessarily the one with the most advanced autofocus, the highest frame rate, or the newest technology.

It's the one that makes you want to go out and create.

The one that keeps photography exciting.

The one that reminds you why you fell in love with the craft.

I didn't switch to Sony because it was better.

I switched because it brought me back to photography.

And at this stage of my career, that's worth more than any specification sheet ever could be.





Jun 07, 2026 at 07:35 AM
patotts
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p.1 #2 · Switched from Canon to Sony


Thanks for sharing your story.

Lenses available on Sony is what keeps me with Sony. Canon has some great RF glass, but the equivelant lens on that platform is bigger, heavier and more expensive compared to e.g. Sony.

I wish Sony would do things differently in terms of ergonomics and body design, menu, licensing around internal RAW, the way you manual focus confirmation (just copy Nikon! ;-)) and much more. But the lenses keep me with Sony.

And the way you feel about going back to certain lenses is how I feel about a good old Leica Summilux 50/1.4 ASPH.



Jun 07, 2026 at 07:45 AM
pgrillone
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p.1 #3 · Switched from Canon to Sony


heavier for sure, my goto lens on canon was the rf 28-70 f/2 . I remember when mirrorless cameras came out, and I so wanted a small body and small lens. ! Its hard to describe the feeling I have now, but contentment is a big part of it.


Jun 07, 2026 at 07:52 AM
Steve Spencer
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p.1 #4 · Switched from Canon to Sony


pgrillone wrote:
# Why I Left Canon for Sony

People often ask me why I left Canon and switched to Sony.

Was it Sony's autofocus?

No.

Was it the color science?

No.

Was it the frame rate?

No.

The truth is much simpler.

I switched because of a lens.

Years ago, early in my photography career, I became fascinated by the Voigtländer 65mm APO-Lanthar f/2. At the time, it was only available for Sony. I loved everything about it. The build quality, the rendering, and the deliberate, hands-on approach it encouraged. It seemed perfectly suited to the kind of photography I wanted to create.

But I was still building a career. I needed
...Show more

Thanks for your story. I find it very similar to my own in many ways. I really enjoy using Voigtlander lenses and I loved the 65 f/2 APO when I had it. I also think that Canon's policy of restricting most 3rd party lenses is annoying and problematic. Despite that, however, I went the opposite direction (Sony to Canon) and it wasn't because of spec sheets either. For me the most important part of the decision was the focus aids for Canon. I really like them and prefer to shoot most of the time, although I can still use magnification if I find them useful. For at least 95% of my manual focus shooting I use focus aids now, however. I went from the A7r V to the Canon R5 II, and the other thing I find surprisingly useful is the top LCD, which the Sony doesn't have. I can see all the shooting parameters without having to look at the EVF or the main LCD. I forgot how much I like that.

I still use Voigtlander lenses a lot. I have an RF mount 40 f/1.2, and a Leica M mount 21 f/3.5, and I am going to get the 90 f/4 APO when it comes out. These latter two lenses work great on mirrorless and I can get the focus aids with the Shotun helicoid adapter (which by the way, I like a lot too). I will probably get the Voigtlander 50 f/3.5 APO as well in time as well as a few Cosina made Zeiss ZE lenses, several of which I also love and all of which will benefit from the Canon focus aids.

Good luck with your new kit. I am sure you will enjoy it. In my view all the major players have compelling systems at this point and small idiosyncratic preferences can easily carry the day in an individual case: in your case the desire for the Voigtlander 65 f/2 APO and in my case the desire for focus aids. There are lots of reasonable choices out there.



Jun 07, 2026 at 07:54 AM
pgrillone
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p.1 #5 · Switched from Canon to Sony


You are absolutely right. At this point, camera brand is probably the last thing I think about. For me, photography has always been about light and glass. The camera body is simply the tool that connects the two.
I also feel fortunate to be at a point in my career where I can make choices based on what inspires me rather than what a client demands. Twenty-plus years ago, practicality drove most of my decisions. Today, I have the luxury of following my curiosity.
The question that has been on my mind lately has less to do with equipment and more to do with the future.
As I've gotten older, I find myself wondering where all of this goes from here. One day I'll walk away from the corporate world that has defined much of my professional life. When that day comes, will I still love photography?
I think that's why the Sony and Voigtländer journey has meant so much to me. It wasn't really about changing camera systems. It was about reconnecting with photography on my own terms.
The encouraging thing is that every time I pick up the camera now, I find myself enjoying the process more, not less. That gives me hope that when the career eventually ends, the passion won't.
Maybe that's the real test. Not whether a camera system survives the next product cycle, but whether photography survives retirement.



Jun 07, 2026 at 08:07 AM
corposant
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p.1 #6 · Switched from Canon to Sony


Now you just need to add the CV 110mm Macro!


Jun 07, 2026 at 08:40 AM
 


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pgrillone
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p.1 #7 · Switched from Canon to Sony


The 110mm APO Macro is tempting, I won’t lie. Voigtländer doesn’t really make “casual” lenses, they make decisions you end up living with.

But I’ve learned my setup works best when it stays minimal. One longer lens would definitely expand what I can do, especially for controlled product work, but I’m also trying not to rebuild the same complexity I just spent years simplifying.

For now, I’m letting the 65 and 35 do most of the talking. If I add anything, it has to earn its place, not just look good in a bag.



Jun 07, 2026 at 08:46 AM
gdanmitchell
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p.1 #8 · Switched from Canon to Sony


Depending on one’s personal situation and preferences, circumstances could lead them in the direction you went or, in different situations, toward Canon or Nikon. :-)

(I write this as a person who is about to move to Sony for other reasons.)

pgrillone wrote:
# Why I Left Canon for Sony

People often ask me why I left Canon and switched to Sony.

Was it Sony's autofocus?

No.

Was it the color science?

No.

Was it the frame rate?

No.

The truth is much simpler.

I switched because of a lens.

Years ago, early in my photography career, I became fascinated by the Voigtländer 65mm APO-Lanthar f/2. At the time, it was only available for Sony. I loved everything about it. The build quality, the rendering, and the deliberate, hands-on approach it encouraged. It seemed perfectly suited to the kind of photography I wanted to create.

But I was still building a career. I needed
...Show more




Jun 07, 2026 at 09:10 AM
pgrillone
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p.1 #9 · Switched from Canon to Sony


That’s pretty much where I’ve landed too.

At this point I don’t see it as Canon vs Nikon vs Sony anymore. Each system is mature enough that you can build serious work in any of them. The differences are real, but they’re usually personal rather than absolute.

For me it came down to a very specific set of lenses and the way I like to work when I’m not under production pressure. For someone else it might be autofocus behavior, ergonomics, or simply what they already own and know inside out.

It’s interesting watching how we all arrive at different systems for completely valid reasons, and still end up doing the same thing at the end of the day: trying to make images that feel like something.



Jun 07, 2026 at 09:24 AM
olegkin
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p.1 #10 · Switched from Canon to Sony


I did not want to get a Sony this soon, but my Nikon is in for repairs, and the a7R VI overcame many of Nikon's UX shortcomings: significantly less weight, significantly smaller size, an aperture ring on the lens, all exposure settings on dials when needed, and an LCD that can be turned away. The viewfinder is odd because of the oversized level indicator (who came up with it), and the pixelated UI elements. The colors are a bit strange with Sony, so I have to figure out how to process the images, and I need to add a baseplate for comfort (RRS, work faster!).

Also, Sony flash connector - Why!!!

Edited on Jun 07, 2026 at 12:21 PM · View previous versions



Jun 07, 2026 at 10:49 AM
pgrillone
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p.1 #11 · Switched from Canon to Sony


I think at this point all the systems are capable. The differences mostly show up in how they fit your workflow. Sony just tends to trade polish for flexibility


Jun 07, 2026 at 11:55 AM







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