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Canon EF-M camera

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This article is about the 1991 35mm SLR. For the homonymous Canon lens mount, see Canon EF-M lens mount. 35mm SLR camera
Canon EF-M
Overview
Type35mm SLR
Lens
Lens mountCanon EF lens mount
Focusing
Focusmanual
Flash
FlashHot shoe only

The Canon EF-M was a manual-focus 35mm film, SLR camera which used the Canon EF lens mount. It was introduced in 1991 for export to the non-Japanese market, and was the only manual focus camera in the EF line. It was not sold as part of the EOS range; the camera's official name was Canon EF-M rather than Canon EOS EF-M.

The EF-M was in essence a Canon EOS 1000 without autofocus that replaced the top-deck LCD with a control dial. It was priced slightly cheaper than the EOS 1000, and relatively few units were sold. It was not directly available in Japan, though some were re-imported. It was sold with a standard 35-80mm kit lens. The lens came with an adapter ring that was intended to make manual focusing easier.

Uniquely amongst Canon EOS bodies it came with an optical manual focus aid, a split-image focusing screen as well as a ring of microprisms. This system was common with manual focus SLRs but had since fallen out of use in the autofocus era.

Backside view of the Canon EF-M




References

  1. "It's A Canon, Jim, But Not As we Know It – The Canon EOS EF-M Review". 2020-10-07. Archived from the original on 2022-01-19. Retrieved 2023-04-01. on the EOS 1000 a camera that shook up the budget end of the market there is no LCD panel on the body There is no built in flash

External links

[REDACTED] Media related to Canon EF-M at Wikimedia Commons

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