The camera nobody talks about: a review of the Canon EOS Ra



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With so many new cameras for every type of photographer and videographer, a few bodies in recent years have all but disappeared from the radar; This is one of them.

If you could browse my library of over 100,000 images I took, you would find that around 0.1% is astrophotography. These numbers don’t accurately represent the types of photos I enjoy creating the most, however. I find astrophotography to be one of the most interesting, attractive, and beautiful types of photography, I just don’t live near a good location to get the type of photos I want so I rarely take it.

You see, for those uninitiated to shoot the stars, there are a number of considerations that determine if you’re going to get a good photo: location, time, season, light pollution, moon phase, etc. However, it is light pollution that is the bane of astronomical life for most photographers. Over the past few years, we’ve seen filters aimed at solving this dilemma, with mixed effectiveness. There are of course some steps you can take during post production to resolve this issue. But in 2018, Canon released a body dedicated to astrophotography, which is very effective, but rarely discussed.

The Canon EOS Ra is a mirrorless body similar to the EOS R but with a specialized sensor. The 30-megapixel full-frame sensor has an IR filter array in front of it, which has increased the amount of transmitted Alpha Hydrogen light up to four times that of a regular sensor. This allows you to capture the true colors of the Orion Nebula, for example, much more easily.

Watch brilliant YouTuber astrophotography, Lonely Speck, as he takes Ra out into the field and confronts him with his Sony with an ordinary sensor.



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