Old lenses feel familiar until you bolt them onto a modern sensor and see what they really do. If a fast fifty is part of your kit, the gap between “good memories” and “good files” can get expensive fast.
Coming to you from Christopher Frost, this methodical video revisits the Canon EF 50mm f/1.4 USM on current bodies instead of treating it like a time capsule. Frost mounts it on a Canon EOS R5 and a Canon EOS R7, with the kind of pacing that makes it easy to track what changes as you stop down. You also get the context that matters if this lens has been on your radar for years: it’s a 1993 design that still sells new, plus it floods the used market at tempting prices. The point here is not nostalgia, it’s risk management when you adapt older EF glass to RF bodies and expect it to behave like a modern prime. The video keeps pulling you back to the same question: is this lens still a smart buy or just a cheap way to learn a hard lesson?
Frost doesn’t sugarcoat the handling side, and that is useful if you buy used gear without inspecting it in person. He calls out the focus ring and internal mechanism as the weak spot, with a history of stiffening, roughness, or damage after an impact. He also notes focus breathing, which matters if you shoot video or you frame tightly and then rack focus. Autofocus speed comes off better than you might expect on mirrorless, but the story is more nuanced than “it focuses” or “it doesn’t,” especially once you start thinking about accuracy at f/1.4. You also get practical details that tend to get skipped, like the 58mm filter thread and the lack of optical stabilization, so you know what you’re signing up for before you start shopping listings.
Once Frost gets into image quality, the tone shifts from “classic” to “clinical,” and the results are not evenly bad or evenly good. On full frame, he shows that the center can clean up quickly as you stop down, while the corners lag behind more than you might expect from a well-loved fifty. He also spends time on purple fringing at f/1.4, including why it can turn into a real headache at night, where point highlights and contrast edges make flaws obvious. Then he pushes it on the APS-C sensor in the R7, and the early-aperture performance looks rough enough that it changes how you’d plan a shoot, especially if you rely on that wide-open look. You still see improvement as the aperture closes, but the tradeoffs become the whole conversation: how far you need to stop down to get corners you can trust and what you lose when you do.
The smart part of the video is how it forces you to separate “character” from “problems you have to fix later.” Frost talks through distortion and vignetting with corrections off, then moves into close-focus sharpness, flare against bright light, coma, and sunstars as you stop down. He also describes bokeh as having a split personality, with smoother backgrounds in some situations and harsher, outlined highlights in others, plus chromatic aberration that hangs on until smaller apertures. Check out the video above for the full rundown from Frost.




