photo:mitakon50mm
Table of Contents
Mitakon Zhong Yi Speedmaster 50mm f/0.95 Pro
see also:
introduction
- manual focus wide aperture 50mm full frame lens for extreme shallow depth of field (DOF)
- available in Sony E mount
- ALL manual focus lenses used at f/0.95 are extremely difficult to nail accurate focus on people as even subtle movements of the subject or the photographer will put them out of focus
- focus peaking is not accurate enough, one needs to resort to magnified view
- these lenses are generally not as sharp as f/1.4 or f/1.8 lenses
specs
- 50mm focal length
- clickless aperture f/0.95 to f/16
- T 1.4
- close focus 0.5m
- 10 elements in 7 groups incl. 4 ED and 1 ultra high refraction element
- full frame
- 9 rounded blades
- 58mm filter
- 720g
- 68.5mm diam x 87mm long
- $US849
reviews
-
- wide open centre sharpness seems similar although Hyperprime perhaps has more microcontrast but does give a touch more purple fringing
- wide open edge sharpness is MUCH better with the Mitakon, although remains soft until stopped down to f/8, the Hyperprime is really poor away from the centre
- both lenses produce a very smooth and quite similar bokeh without any “onion rings”
- both have vignetting and flare wide open
- Mitakon is less bulky and is lighter and less expensive
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- “While the focus peaking on the α7 II is a valuable asset and certainly helps in achieving critical focus, it still takes some patience, persistence, and practice to accurately focus the Mitakon”
- “Its long focus ring throw is awesome for video work, but can slow you down when shooting subjects with any movement at all”
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- “focus peaking exists on mirrorless cameras, and it helps… but it’s not very precise. Focus peaking highlights contrasty areas of the picture, and it highlights a range that much deeper than the actual depth-of-field. If you rely entirely on focus peaking with this lens, you’ll often be an inch or so off, and your picture will look wrong.”
photo/mitakon50mm.txt · Last modified: 2015/11/02 10:36 by gary1