Metabones' New Adapter Lets You Use Any Canon Lens on Fuji Medium Format With No Issues

Metabones' New Adapter Lets You Use Any Canon Lens on Fuji Medium Format With No Issues

Traditionally, you can adapt lenses made for a larger format on a smaller format — full frame lenses on an APS-C sensor, for example — but going the other way will produce issues the majority of the time. But thanks to Metabones, you can now adapt any Canon lens to a Fujifilm medium format camera with full functionality and no loss of image quality. 

The usual problem is that a lens designed for a smaller format system will not project a large enough image circle to cover a larger sensor. However, the new Metabones EF-GFX Smart Expander gets around this in a clever way, by magnifying the image circle from a Canon EF lens to cover the sensor of any Fujifilm GFX medium format camera. The tradeoff is a 1.26x crop factor that increases the focal length of whatever lens you are using and decreases its maximum aperture. For example, 24-70mm f/2.8 lens will become a 30-88mm f/3.5 zoom or a 50mm f/1.4 lens will become a 63mm f/1.8. The adapter also includes electronic integration to allow for autofocus and in-body stabilization. Metabones does warn that autofocus may "have unsatisfactory performance and may not work at all with some lenses," however. Still, for any Fuji GF system user who wants access to Canon's deep library of lenses and who doesn't need extreme autofocus, it is exciting news! 

Alex Cooke's picture

Alex Cooke is a Cleveland-based portrait, events, and landscape photographer. He holds an M.S. in Applied Mathematics and a doctorate in Music Composition. He is also an avid equestrian.

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5 Comments

Super interesting. But unfortunately, they didn't post any image samples....

Metabones' proclamation of "no loss of image quality" is a bit difficult to believe considering this is basically a teleconverter combined with the ability to use EF lenses on the GFX mount. I've never heard of a case where teleconverters don't cause some degree of image quality degradation.

Well it’s relative, but speed boosters work well and don’t show any degradation in my tests.

Speed boosters are the opposite of teleconverters, if anything you get better image quality when using them.

Fun to say, that Canon's 50mm 1.2 from is more espensive than Fujifilm's 63mm 2.8. In general native lenses for the GFX system is very affordable and for those who love the swallow depth of field, there is the Mitakon 65mm 1.5