





📸 Elevate your craft with the compact powerhouse lens that pros swear by!
The Tamron AF 28-75mm f/2.8 SP XR Di LD Aspherical lens for Canon DSLRs delivers professional-grade image quality with a versatile mid-range zoom and a bright, constant f/2.8 aperture. Engineered with advanced XR and LD glass, aspherical elements, and internal focusing, it offers sharp, distortion-minimized photos in a compact, lightweight design. Perfect for full-frame and APS-C cameras, this lens balances exceptional optical performance with portability and affordability, making it a top choice for serious photographers seeking premium results without the premium price.



| ASIN | B0000A1G05 |
| Best Sellers Rank | #388 in SLR Camera Lenses |
| Customer Reviews | 4.5 4.5 out of 5 stars (1,019) |
| Date First Available | June 13, 2003 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 1.54 pounds |
| Item model number | 28-75mm Canon |
| Manufacturer | Tamron |
| Product Dimensions | 3.62 x 2.87 x 2.87 inches |
R**M
You will love this lens- I'm pairing this with an a77
First of all, this lens is fantastic. There are a few reasons why, and I will go over them, but if you are looking for a great walk around lens that is nice and fast, look no further. This lens is heavy, built well, and produces wonderful images. Visit Tamron's site to download the lens guide PDF: http://www.tamron-usa.com/lenses/prod/2875mm.asp#ad-image-0 Let's get down to brass tacks, the pros and cons of this lens. I will tell you why I like this lens and how I use it. I am a working photographer. I earn a living shooting weddings and events in Hampton Roads, Virginia. This lens helps me earn money because it produces great results in a wide range of applications. To be truthful, I push the limits of both my camera and the lighting situations I find myself in and would consider my knowledge at an expert level. First there must be a basis for comparison. Lenses are not created equal, and the price of a lens is volatile, that is to say that once a professional level of optics are attained, very small advances in performance can come at a very high cost. Therefore, I consider the Category, Sensor Size the lens is designed to work with, Distortion, Chromatic Aberration, Aperture, and Price, in that order. CATEGORY: Constant f2.8 28-75 Full Frame Lens. This Lens is competing with other Lenses with constant aperture at f2.8 with a focal length between 16-75. Tamron Does offer a weather sealed version of this lens for around $1100. It has a pezio drive and is directly competing with the Nikon 17-55mm f/2.8G ED-IF AF-S DX Lens. You can find these two lenses here: Nikon: http://www.amazon.com/Nikon-17-55mm-2-8G-ED-IF-Nikkor/dp/B000144I2Q $1399 Tamron: http://www.amazon.com/Nikon-17-55mm-2-8G-ED-IF-Nikkor/dp/B000144I2Q $1099 SENSOR SIZE: No, the lens does not have a sensor in it, but it is made for a Full Frame camera. You can use this lens on an APSC sensor size, which is good. Some even believe that you will have better results using a FF lens on an APSC sensor because of the crop factor pulling the sharpest part of the lens, the center area, into focus and discarding the edges of the lens. DISTORTION: Distortion, This is a legacy designed lens. This is important because the lens was designed when cameras did not have built in line correction and micro correction. Moreover, this lens was designed when the average consumer did not have access to programs like DxO Optics Pro 9 and Light Room (both of these programs have built in profiles to correct lens distortion on specific camera bodies). This is important to you because it was designed when the lens had to be good optically because corrections in post production were very difficult. This lens Hit the market in the at least 2003. This lens has some soft areas wide open at 28mm. They are mainly in the edges of the lens. Center is tack sharp. This is not a bad thing though, remember that an aperture of 2.8 should give a very shallow depth of field, and an extremely narrow focus. Therefore one would expect the edges to be soft. I absolutely love this. DXO optics has tested this lens and approves of it. But don't let someone else's numbers confuse you. All their numbers mean is that it is a great lens for the price. I'm sure that someone will begin comparing this statement to some $4k plus lens, but remember, this lens is not competing in the $4k arena. It does, however, hold up very well. In my use I have seen very little to no distortion. I take portraits of individuals and groups, so I would not expect to see a lot of distortion. If I were taking photo of buildings, any distortion the lens has would become more apparent. CHROMATIC ABERRATION So far I have seen nothing that I would say detracts form the image. The Lens is prone to flaring when pointed toward direct bright light, like a sunset, but what better of an image to get than a silhouette of a bride and groom with a natural lens flair? For me its great, maybe not so much for you. APERTURE This is an f2.8, constant throughout the zoom range, right? Yes. but do you know what that means? Are all 2.8's equal? The answer is both yes and no. To make this simple, aperture is nothing more than a mathematical ratio. it actually looks like this f 1:2.8, We just drop the "1:" and display it as f2.8. So now that you know it's a ratio, what is it competing? It is comparing goal length to the diameter of the aperture, or how big of a whole the aperture has at a known focal length. To find out how big your aperture is in MM just divide the focal length by the current aperture. So a focal length of 100mm at an aperture of 2 would be 100mm/2=50mm. This means that your aperture would be physically open by 50mm at a focal length of 100mm. This is important because, as ratios are always comparing aperture diameter to focal length, they should be constant across different lenses. So you could say that a 50mm prime at an f2 has an aperture diameter of 25mm. The example above showed that a lens with a focal length of 100mm at an f2 would be 50mm in diameter. This is correct, but would be costly to build and quite heavy. Instead many lenses have an articulated aperture, which is to say that their maximum aperture changes throughout the zoom range. you will usually see something like an 18-55 f3.5-5.6. That means that on the wide end of the lens the max aperture is 3.5, so 18/3.5=5.14mm and 55/5.6=9.82mm. This lens example from above is almost always going to be bad in low light, and would probably be a kit lens. The Tamron Lens that this article is about is a 24-75 f2.8 which means that the max aperture on the wide end is 24/2,8=8.57mm and on the zoom end the aperture diameter is 75/2.8=26.78mm. Let's compare them: Common 18-55 f3.5-5.8 Max Aperture diameter wide angle: 5.14mm max aperture zoomed in: 9.82mm Tamron 24-75 f2.8 Max Aperture diameter wide angle: 8.57mm max aperture zoomed in: 26.78mm Bigger diameter aperture is better because it gives you more usable light in low light situations, it also gives you more control on depth of field. PRICE: It's $500. This is a steal for this lens. It works in many situations and gives you the most control over your creativity- considering the alternatives, it is about ½ or less the price. I have truly enjoyed this lens and you will too. My suggestion is to buy the body of the camera you want- do not buy a bundled lens- and get this lens as your walk around lens. Check out samples with this lens and others buy visiting www.RobertHammPhotography.com
J**I
Outstanding lens!
I have never bought a non-Canon lens because I just love the look, feel, and optical quality of the Canon line particularly the L series lenses. But I kept reading glowing reviews about this lens. On multiple websites. So, I went out and took a look. First impression: the build quality is not as good as a Canon L series lens. Duh! It costs about 1/4 as much for goodness sake. This is a plastic lens - not metal. But I must admit that the build quality was pretty darn good. Better, I think, than the Sigma lenses I've seen. Fit and finish was very nice and tight. I'd give the build quality a 4/5. Not bad. I figured I could live with it. Next, I put the lens on my camera. I'd read reviews complaining about the speed of the focusing. It may not be quite as quick as my 200 f2.8 L series lens but it was pretty darn good and for my purposes, plenty fast. A 4.5/5 I'd read reviews complaining about the noise and the fact that the AF was not USM. I thought the AF worked very quietly. Not at all distracting and barely discernable. Noise - not an issue. Then, I took pictures with the lens and I was absolutely floored! How in the world did Tamron manage to produce a lens that performed so well optically for such a reasonable price?! Beautiful contrast, excellent resolution, gorgeous colors, and extremely sharp, particularly above f2.8. But, f2.8 is very good as well. Obviously the first comparison that comes to mind is between this lens and the Canon 24-70 f2.8 L. I would say, I kid you not, that this lens is in every respect optically the equal of the Canon or better than the Canon. I could not believe it. I tested this lens directly against a brand new copy of the Canon 24-70 f2.8L. Method: I tested both lenses on a tripod @ F 2.8 and 8.0 @ 28mm 50mm and 70mm. Target limestone wall 9.5 feet parallel to the sensor plane. Remote release employed. No mirror lockup. Center and all four corners were evaluated to my naked eye on a monitor using 100% crops. Both lenses were new copies received within the last 7 days. The limestone wall lent itself perfectly to evaluating sharpness and subtle contrast and color rendition. There was enormous detail present in the wall with subtle colorations present. Findings: 28MM F8: Tamron definitely sharper in the center and corners 28MM F2.8: Tamron definitely sharper in the center and corners 50MM F8: Tamron slightly sharper in the center and very slightly sharper in corners 50MM F2.8: Tamron slightly sharper in center and equal in corners. 70MM F2.8: Canon sharper in center and at corners. Incidentally noted was inability of Tamron to focus as sharply as I was able to achieve with manual focusing. 70MM F8: Tamron sharper in center with Canon slightly sharper in corners. Some have said that there is less flare with the Canon, but if you use the lens hood that should not be a problem. I didn't notice excessive flare in my copy. Admittedly there is significant copy to copy variation in both the Canon and the Tamron, but my findings convinced me that at 1/4 the price, and with the Tamron weighing 1 pound less than the Canon that the Tamron was the lens for me. Optically 5/5!! I cannot recommend this lens highly enough. It is the first non-Canon lens I have owned and I am thrilled.
L**0
Amazing constant f2.8/28-75mm zoom lens. Light weight and small in size which help weight reduction in holding camera longer comfortably. Very sharp image produced in every shot even without built-in lens stabilization system. A decade old design from Tamron, but it can still produce superb images in modern camera today.
D**A
Por parte del envio, llego en perfecto estado y sin ningún problema. Por parte de la optica y su uso; llevo ya probándolo en campo en distintas situaciones y es un gran lente, versátil y ágil. Fotografió deportes de acción y la velocidad de enfoque no me ha fallado, siempre es preciso y rápido. la mayor contra es que el anillo de zoom esta bastante duro y cuesta trabajo en muchos casos de presión y urgencia moverlo. pero este escenario me ha pasado pocas veces. aun asi es un gran lente que vale todo su precio!
M**K
I am extremely impressed with the image quality of this lens. I spent a lot of time looking to getting a fast mid-range zoom for my Canon 6D, but as a student, was unable to afford the ludicrous price of the Canon 24-70 f/2.8L. While you can not expect the same image quality or performance you would find in Canon's L lens, for the price this is a fantastic alternative. I own a Canon 17-40 f/4L and some other quality Canon lenses so I am no stranger to their performance level. Even wide open, this lens has a great centre sharpness, it does however tend to fall off in the corner. When stopped down you start to get edge to edge sharpness. The lens has a couple things that I am not the biggest fan of. One being that the rotation for the zoom is in the opposite direction of all of Canon's lenses, this just takes a little getting used to and is in no way a deal-breaker. The other issue is that the focusing motor can be loud at times which is not ideal for very quiet situations. However, the auto focus is accurate and the sound can be easily ignored. One thing not mentioned in the Amazon description is that Tamron classifies this lens as being a Macro lens, while it in no way will get you the focus distance of a dedicated macro lens, it is a welcome surprise and can get close enough to take some interesting shots. Another thing I am very happy with is that the lens comes with a 6 year Canadian warranty, something the big guys don't come even close to offering. While Tamron does have a newer version of this lens in a more traditional 24-70 range with image stabilization, this is still a great (and much cheaper) option, and (in my opinion) image stabilization is not really necessary at this focal length. Overall I would highly recommend this lens to anyone looking for a much more affordable option than the ones provided by Canon or Sigma.
T**Z
Obiettivo praticamente nuovo. Ottima scelta.
A**N
Busque las opciones luminosidad y de este rango focal entre Nikon, Sigma y Tamron, leí todas las comparativas y análisis que pude, por precio deseche la opción de Nikon, la ventaja que tenía el Sigma vs. Tamron era la estabilización, sin embargo de último momento incrementaron considerablemente el precio del Sigma y me decidí por Tamron, la sopresa primera fue al recibirlo súper rápido y segundo por el peso, es un lente pesado!! De inmediato leí el pequeño manual que viene incluido, lo revise a fondo y lo monté en mi Nikon D300. De inmediato lo probé en varias situaciones, mi veredicto... excelente calidad de construcción, enfoque rápido y preciso, buen desempeño en condiciones de poca luz, enfoque macro mas que bueno, no hice pruebas de aberración cromática porque ya hay muchísimas, pero la calidad de las imagenes, los colores y los detalles son muy buenos! Generalmente trabajo con lentes de focal fija 35mm y 50mm f/1.8 de Nikon, el Tamron lo ocupe para cubrir un evento dentro de una iglesia, después al aire libre en un jardín y durante la noche en un salón, en todo momento funcionó sin ningún problema, aún en condiciones de poca luz se desempeño muy bien. Es una excelente relación precio-calidad, sin duda no se quedará guardado cuando tenga que cubrir algún evento social.
Trustpilot
4 days ago
2 months ago