SKU: 8976948381

Canon RF 75-300mm f 4-5.6 Telephoto Zoom lens

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Description

Canon RF 75-300mm f 4-5.6 Telephoto Zoom lensHighlights: Canon telephoto lens for wildlife, sports, portraits Entry level, RF mount Lightweight, compact, close focusing Filter size; 58mm The Canon RF 75300mm f 45. 6 is a lightweight, entry level telephoto zoom designed for wildlife, sports and portrait photography. Built for EOS R System cameras, this compact RF mount lens gives beginners an easy and affordable way to explore long range photography while staying portable and easy to handle. With

Highlights:

Canon telephoto lens for wildlife, sports, portraits

Entry level, RF mount

Lightweight, compact, close focusing

Filter size; 58mm

 

The Canon RF 75–300mm f/4–5.6 is a lightweight, entry-level telephoto zoom designed for wildlife, sports and portrait photography. Built for EOS R System cameras, this compact RF-mount lens gives beginners an easy and affordable way to explore long-range photography while staying portable and easy to handle.

With its 75–300mm zoom range, you can frame distant subjects clearly — whether you’re shooting sports from the sidelines, wildlife in nature, or candid portraits from a comfortable distance.


Big reach in a compact design

This versatile telephoto lens lets you pull distant subjects right into the frame, making it ideal for wildlife, sports and outdoor photography. The long zoom range allows you to isolate your subject for stronger visual impact, while still giving you the flexibility to zoom out and include more of the scene when needed.

The lens also focuses as close as 1.5 metres, making it suitable for frame-filling portraits of people and animals.


Optimised for EOS R cameras

Designed for RF-mount EOS R System cameras, this lens is fully compatible across the range. When used on APS-C cameras such as the EOS R100, the cropped sensor delivers an even greater apparent reach of 120–480mm, helping you fill the frame from even further away — perfect for wildlife and sports photography.


Beautiful subject separation

Using the telephoto zoom range and widest aperture, you can create strong subject-to-background separation for a professional look. The seven-blade aperture produces smooth background blur, helping your subject stand out clearly from its surroundings.

The lens’s autofocus motor works to reliably and accurately maintain sharp focus, keeping your subject clear and detailed.


Lightweight and ready to travel

Weighing approximately 507g, this is one of the lightest lenses in its class, making it ideal for sports days, travel and family adventures. The compact build is designed to be carried easily, and the large zoom ring lets you move through the full zoom range with just a quarter-turn, making framing quick and intuitive.

A 58mm filter thread allows you to expand your creative options with compatible filters.


Optical performance

The lens features Super Spectra coatings, which help deliver optimum colour and contrast across the zoom range. This ensures images maintain clarity and visual impact, even when shooting in challenging lighting conditions.

Compatibility

EOS R100/EOS R50/EOS R10/EOS R7/EOS R8/EOS R6 Mark II/EOS R5 Mark II/EOS RP

EOS R6/EOS R5/EOS R3/EOS R1/EOS Ra/EOS R/EOS R5 C/EOS C400/EOS C80/EOS C70

EOS R50 V

*For cameras with an APS-C sized sensor, a crop factor applies giving an equivalent focal length of 1.6x – this means that the 75-300mm on an APS-C camera will give the field of view equivalent to a 112-320mm lens on a Full Frame camera. Check camera user manual for further details.

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SKU: 8976948381

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4.3 ★★★★★
Based on 11 reviews
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Jan Strnad
West Palm Beach, US
★★★★★ 5
Essential reading for Democratic campaign managers
Format: Kindle
For decades it has frustrated me that, while most of the country shares Democratic beliefs over Republican ones, Democrats keep losing elections. Why? Because the very values Democrats hold dear...taking the higher road, trying to stay "above the fray", concentrating on issues over personalities...fail to speak to the emotional brain that makes most voters' electoral decisions. Whether it's the language they use while failing to understand its connotations, over-handling by committees that blunt the message, or simple refusal to debate some topics at all (abortion, gun control, race) thereby defaulting on them to the Republicans, Democrats systematically undermine their own campaigns. Westen's book is must reading for every Democrat who wants to hold public office! Thus, the five stars. On the other hand, Westen makes his point clearly and firmly in the first third of the book, and then beats us over the head with it, taking us point by point through campaigns, tweaking the information endlessly, and frankly, about halfway through I started skimming and eventually put it down. "I get it already!" I thought, and moved on. Also, this is horribly produced ebook. It's obviously scanned from a printed copy and poorly proofread, it at all. When Westen talks about the perception of the word "gull" and how it affects elections, you have to read a bit to understand that it's the word "gun" he's talking about! Words bizarrely split, words run together, bizarre punctuation and misspelling due to OCR errors are rife on every single page. Furthermore, the type looks like bad photocopying with the machine set on "light." Ugly, ugly, ugly. Yet the publisher (Hatchette) charges nearly as much for the ebook as for the print book, which I'm sure looks a lot better. It couldn't look any worse. If I could, I'd rate it "five stars" for the content, downgrade it to "three stars" for being redundant, and finally give it "one star" for being so terribly produced. That first third of the book, though, is so important for Democrats to understand (the Republicans already have a masterful grasp of it) that I went with the "five star" rating.
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Reviewed in the United States on September 10, 2011
K
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Kenneth H. Cohen MD
Phoenix, US
★★★★★ 5
A Great Awakening
Format: Kindle
Political Brain offers a profound and enlightening roadmap to reboot and reconfigure the Democratic Party and campaign strateies. The new and innovative discipline offered up should be mandatory reading for anyone running for any office.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on January 27, 2025
S
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Scot Denhalter
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 5
A Bitter Pill, but Much Needed Knowledge
Format: Kindle
Its thesis is that we, as humans, are predisposed to emotional, gut-level decision-making. Although most liberals will not want to accept this, author, Drew Westen, makes his case so well even the most inveterate ostriches must pull their heads out of the sand. We believe first, then we seek to support our beliefs. How we come to believe is a complex interaction of genetics and environment, which Westen makes no effort to reveal. What he focuses on is the counter-productive illusion that facts and issues matter more than the emotions underlying the principles we value most in life. And Westen disabuses the reader of this illusion quite completely, giving examples of what should have been said and what should have been done in Democrat campaigns in response to Republican attack. As a psychologist, Westin teaches us how the human brain works and why it is important for liberal politics to know how it works before selecting a candidate and mounting a campaign.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 23, 2013
B
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Bri
Omaha, US
★★★★★ 3
good to a point
Format: Paperback
basically what could help democrats win.all well and good,but that side has much of the same donors(drug companies,defense contractors,oil industry,etc.)as the republicans.THAT'S why they don't push back fundamentally. one of my big problems with the author is his unapologetic.uneducated islamaphobia.he sounds like george bush when he mentions muslims actually.he fell for the propaganda.instead of drinking the koolaid of the cult,he should sip from the tea of informed tact. i know right-wingers wear their stances/prejudices on their sleeves,but the problem with the liberal side is the smugness they can exude towards everyone else,when,let's face,they're no better.they went to college to deepen THEIR prejudices with a more expanded vocabulary. otherwise,it's interesting from a psychological standpoint on how and what moves the masses.again,it's worth it to a point,just keep in mind that he's a bit of a meathead
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Reviewed in the United States on November 22, 2020
D
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Daniel Hahn
Carnegie, US
★★★★★ 4
The one-stars miss the point:
Format: Hardcover
Thomas J. Farrell and I may be two of a small handful who actually have read Aristotle's Rhetoric. There are good reasons for this. Aristotle's rhetoric is useful to know historically, and gives one the aroma of scholarship, yet only in the sense of one's being well-read but not particularly useful. Westen's point is that Democrats are starving for useful rhetorical advice. Grounding ourselves in material some 2,300 years old is just not sufficient. cglambdin also missed the whole point, but more bluntly and therefore clearly. I would paraphrase Westen's major point as being: as long as you go around thinking "reason, good/everything else, not so good," you lose. Not only do you lose, you DESERVE TO LOSE. Why? In a democracy, "nobody likes a smartass." The corollary to this is: "if you don't know the difference between being smart and being a smartass, you're probably the latter." Now to an ancient aristocrat like Aristotle, the distinction wouldn't have mattered. In the United States of America, it should matter to everyone aspiring to leadership. We common folk expect our leaders to resonate with our values and life conditions. We don't care whether your blood runs a bit blue (as with the Kennedys) as long as you can be with us in spirit when you need to be. It's only polite. In 1992 the smartass class had great fun with Bill Clinton's "I feel your pain" comment, but missed the point that Clinton resonated while President Bush the First's glance at his watch during the same town meeting debate ended the campaign then and there. Drew Westen evokes what I considered state of the art in the communication field when I was in graduate school twenty-five years ago. Because he's a psychologist, and also not a smartass, I didn't expect him to bring up the theoretical language of people ranging from George Herbert Mead to Kenneth Burke. Rather, he demonstrates their insights! We get it! His work also fits well in the tradition of Walter Fisher's groundbreaking . Two things about Westen's book take off a star. Yes, he does meander. Also, his repetitive bashing of Bob Shrum comes off, at last, as an extended hard-sell advertisement for his own political consulting business. Perfection is elusive. Nevertheless, The Political Brain is doggone useful!
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Reviewed in the United States on July 27, 2007

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