Canon Hybrid Image Stabilizer
Canon’s new Hybrid Image Stabilizer is the world’s first optical Image Stabilizer to compensate for both angular camera shake and shift camera shake. Making it’s debut in a new SLR lens due for release before the end of 2009, the Hybrid Image Stabilizer optimally compensates for angular camera shake (rotational) and shift camera shake (linear), using a new acceleration sensor that determines the amount of shift-based camera shake.
Canon UK Press Release
New Canon Hybrid IS world’s first Image Stabilizer to compensate for two types of camera shake
London, United Kingdom / Republic of Ireland, 22nd July 2009 — Canon Inc. announced today the development of Hybrid Image Stabilizer (IS), the world’s first* optical Image Stabilizer which compensates for both angular camera shake and shift camera shake. The technology will be incorporated in an interchangeable single lens reflex (SLR) camera lens planned for commercial release before the end of 2009.
Several different preventative methods and corrective procedures have been introduced to compensate for errors caused by camera shake. Canon began researching methods to compensate for camera shake in the 1980s. In 1995 Canon launched the EF 75-300mm f/4-5.6 IS USM, the world’s first interchangeable SLR camera lens to feature a mechanism that compensates for optical camera shake. Since then, the company has continued to produce a variety of interchangeable lenses with image stabilisation capabilities, and boasts a total of 21 such lenses in its current product line-up, including the EF 200mm f/2L IS USM which features up to 5-stops of blur correction.
Canon’s newly developed Hybrid IS technology optimally compensates for angular camera shake (rotational) and shift camera shake (linear). Sudden changes in camera angle can cause significant blur in images taken during standard shooting, whereas blur caused by shift-based shaking, when a camera moves parallel to the subject, is more pronounced in macro and other close-up photography.
The new Hybrid IS technology incorporates an angular velocity sensor that detects the extent of angular camera shake which is found in all previous optical Image Stabilizer mechanisms, as well as a new acceleration sensor that determines the amount of shift-based camera shake. Hybrid IS also employs a newly developed algorithm that combines the output of the two sensors and moves the lens elements to compensate for both types of movement. Hybrid IS dramatically enhances the effects of Image Stabilizer especially during macro shooting, which is difficult for conventional image stabilisation technologies.
Canon is actively engaged in ongoing research and development of interchangeable SLR camera lenses incorporating Hybrid IS technology, and is aiming for the early commercialisation and inclusion of the technology in a wide range of products.
* For use in interchangeable SLR camera lenses as of July 17, 2009. According to Canon research



#1 Steve
Anyone got any thoughts on whether this is likely to be a new lens or a re-work of an existing model? And if the latter, which one.
I'm thinking about replacing my 70-300 IS with a 100-400 IS because I need a bit more reach. So it might be wise to wait until we have some more detail.
10:07 am - Wednesday, July 22, 2009
#2 Mark Goldstein
Canon haven't provided any info on the first lens that will feature the Hybrid Image Stabilizer.
My guess would be a new focal range that doesn't take away sales from their current IS lenses, or an upgrade version of a popular model with a premium price-tag.
But that's only a guess!
10:15 am - Wednesday, July 22, 2009
#3 Nigel
Doesn't the new Pentax K7 already do exactly that ?
2:59 pm - Wednesday, July 22, 2009
#4 johan
I cannot figure out how you rotate an image using a lens element inside the lens body (awkward double use of the word...). By tilting a lens element inside the body, I sort of understand how you can shift the image on the sensor to compensate for tilt shake.
Some sort of deformable lens element so one side can be shifted down and the other up?
6:33 pm - Wednesday, July 22, 2009
#5 Mladen Radman
Marketing working overtime again.
Improvements will probably be only marginal on existing IS/VR models.
3:00 pm - Thursday, July 23, 2009
#6 K Ryan
Does anyone happen to know if this IS system will be available through an IS on/off switch?
I have used blurring as a technique with some of my shots?
4:38 pm - Thursday, July 23, 2009