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Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DN X-Mount (40MP) Review

Dustin Abbott

December 5th, 2023

When I reviewed the Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DN a few months ago I expressed an interest in revisiting it on Fuji. Fuji’s cameras with the 40MP X-Trans sensors are serious disruptors in this space, and, while I own and love the Fujifilm X-H2, I’m still not decided as to whether they haven’t taken resolution on APS-C a bit too far, as everything but the most of elite of lenses struggle to resolve it. Thus a lens that performs well on Sony (at 26MP) may not look nearly as good at 40MP on Fuji. In fact, I have yet to see a zoom lens yet that really excels at 40MP on APS-C; I have a short list of lenses that keep up with the sensor, and they are all primes. This review of the 10-18X is not a whole new review, as there are elements that are identical to the E-mount version of the lens I’ve already tested, but rather an update on autofocus and image quality relative to Fujifilm X-Mount. You can see my thoughts in the video review here…or read on.

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Thanks to Gentec (Sigma’ distributer in Canada) for sending me a review loaner of this lens. As always, this is a completely independent review. *The tests and most of the photos that I share as a part of my review cycle have been done on the 40MP Fujifilm X-H2 that I reviewed here.

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This year we’ve seen two important DC DN lenses, including the excellent 23mm F1.4 DC DN and this new 10-18mm DN, a wide angle zoom lens with a fast maximum aperture of F2.8. This will certainly be a welcome addition to Fuji shooters as there are relatively few wide angle zooms to choose from, and none that quite match the combination of compact size, price, and performance of the 10-18X.

The Sigma 10-18mm DN is the sixth lens in this series. Here’s a look at the DC (APS-C) DN (mirrorless) lineup thus far.

  1. Sigma 16mm F1.4
  2. Sigma 23mm F1.4
  3. Sigma 30mm F1.4
  4. Sigma 56mm F1.4
  5. Sigma 10-18mm F2.8
  6. Sigma 18-50mm F2.8

Sigma’s DC DN lenses have all fallen under the umbrella of their Contemporary lineup, and while Sigma has proven willing to experiment with new features and design elements within the ART and Sport lineups, the Contemporary lenses have all stuck to a fairly rigid design formula. That continues to be the case here, so this little lens mostly looks and handles pretty similarly to other lenses in the lineup.

There’s some good and bad with this, but what certainly isn’t bad is that you can capture some absolutely amazing images with this little lens.

Yes, the colors were just that rich; the Sigma has captured them accurately.

This is a useful zoom range, allowing you to go from extremely wide at 10mm (15mm full frame equivalent) through the various steps to 18mm (27mm full frame equivalent).

The Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN carries a price tag of $599 USD. Should this lens jump to the top of your list when you are looking for a wide angle zoom lens for your camera? Here’s the original review for more information.

Sigma 10-18mm DN Build and Handling

Though Sigma has released a LOT of lenses over the past few years, this is (surprisingly) only the second APS-C specific zoom lens released for mirrorless cameras. The first was the 18-50mm F2.8 DN that I reviewed almost exactly two years ago. I quite liked that little zoom, and am currently working on an updated Fuji X-mount review like this one. The 10-18mm provides an obvious compliment to that lens, allowing for coverage from 10-50mm between the two lenses, or the equivalent of 15-75mm on full frame. This is all with a maximum aperture of F2.8, which is obviously very useful. What’s more, both of these lenses are extremely compact and light, making them very easy to travel with as a kit. The new 10-18mm DN weighs just 250g in Fuji X-mount, or 8.8 oz. It is 72.2mm in diameter and 64.3mm in length (2.8 x 2.5″). That’s about 5g lighter than the E-mount version I tested, largely because X-mount is slightly narrower than E-mount (2mm).

Up front we have the ability to use traditional filters in a very standard 67mm size.

The 10-18mm and 18-50mm make for a very compact pairing.

The closest competitor to the Sigma 10-18mm DN will be the Tamron 11-20mm F2.8 RXD; it has a bit more zoom range, but, importantly, it is not as wide. It’s easier to crop in enough to account for that 2mm on the telephoto end, but you can’t always step back to get more in the frame. Native Fuji options include the 10-24mm F4 OIS WR, and the premium option is the huge XF 8-16mm F2.8 LM WR. The Sigma is easily the least expensive of these options, running $230 cheaper than the Tamron and $400-600 cheaper than the Fuji options.

The Sigma is not the cheapest of their four lenses at $599 USD, and also manages to be the smallest and lightest despite going wide (10mm) and having a large maximum aperture. In fairness, it also has the smallest zoom ratio, though not by much. I suspect that many will find the weaknesses an acceptable tradeoff for the significant strengths.

As noted, Sigma’s Contemporary branded lenses have followed a very definite design path. Sigma’s build quality on these lenses is quite nice.  The aesthetic and feel of the lens isn’t really different than their ART series. The design language and materials are quite similar…just smaller.

But where the ART and Contemporary lenses diverge is in the features. The key difference is that the DC DN zoom lenses are essentially featureless.  There is no aperture ring, no switches, no iris lock, no declicking of the aperture, no focus hold button. Now, to be fair, the Tamron lens (probably the primary competitor) also lacks these features. The Fuji XF 10-24mm and 8-16mm have an aperture ring, while some competition on Sony has even more features.

I’ve seen this happen before; a lens maker locks themselves into a certain standard of features for a series of lenses, but then the market shifts and that design philosophy is no longer acceptable.

Case in point is Sigma’s approach to weather sealing on the Contemporary lineup. The 10-18X has a weather sealing gasket at the lens mount but no internal seals…just like the other DC DN lenses. This is at least one area where the Sigma falls behind the competitors – the Tamron 11-20mm, Sony 10-20mm, and Fuji 8-16mm + 10-24mm all feature fully weather sealed designs.

This is a very short lens (just 62mm in length), so that means there is a lot to fit in on a zoom lens. Sigma’s design is slightly unique in that the manual focus ring is actually the closer of the two. It occupies the center of the barrel, while the zoom ring is on a flared out section near the front of the lens. Like other lenses designed for mirrorless cameras, this is a focus-by-wire system in which input from the focus ring is routed through the focus motor.  It is actually the focus motor that moves the elements, making manual focus more of an emulation than a direct movement of the elements.  Some lenses pull this off better than others, and the Sigma 10-18mm DN is one of them. There is good weight/damping on the focus ring, and no visible steps during focus changes. I didn’t notice any focus lag either; the action on the ring and the movement of focus seemed directly linked.  I will note that the lens will automatically alert the body to magnify the image when you are manually focusing, which is a big help in visually confirming focus.  

There is about 10mm between the focus ring and the beginning of the flared section that leads to the zoom ring. I appreciate some space there, as that was one of my complaints about the Sony 10-20mm; there was almost no room between the two rings on that lens, and it was easy to inadvertently move the wrong ring. There’s a very definite difference between two rings and position on the Sigma, though there is a different problem. At the fully retracted position (there is a slight external zoom action), the lens hood fits so tightly against the zoom ring that there isn’t a lot of space for your thumb to fit on the narrow ring. If you happen to have longer fingernails, you might actually find zooming a bit of a challenge.

The zoom action itself is very smooth. This is a “reverse zoom” in terms of the retraction; the inner barrel is fully retracted at 18mm and extends the furthest at 10mm, though the barrel extension is only about 10mm.

Sigma is experimenting with a new lens hood design for this lens. Rather than bayoneting into place, it is actually just a push on design. You still need to line up the markings on the hood and the barrel, but then you just push the lens hood into place rather than rotate it. A spring/lever mechanism holds the hood locked into place. You can release it by just doing a slight rotation to the left.

The primary “pro” of this design is it allows them to the make the lens hood a little thinner as there doesn’t need to be room in the hood design for the bayonet action. Sigma touts the fact that while the filter size of the 10-18mm is 12mm larger than the 18-50mm (67 vs 55mm), the diameter of the lens hood is only 3.8mm larger.

If you want to reverse the hood for storage, you now line up an arrow on the lens hood with the previous mark on the lens barrel and push it forward. Removing it simply requires a similar slight rotation to the left. As per usual, Sigma’s lens hoods are just a little bit nicer than the competition, including some soft-touch materials, texture variations, and lens information imprinted on them.

The 10-18X has two different minimum focusing distances for the wide and telephoto ends of the zoom range. At 10mm you can focus as closely as 11.6cm (4.6″) and can get as high as a 0.25x magnification…though you have to be pretty much right on top of your subject to get it. 

At 18mm that disance extends to 19.1cm (4.6″) and the magnification drops to just 0.14x…though shots at 18mm are a whole lot easier to get!

The aperture iris is electromagnetic and controlled from within the camera (no aperture ring).  It has seven rounded aperture blades that do a fairly good job of retaining a circular shape even with the lens stopped down, though frankly you won’t have a lot of opportunity to shoot shallow depth of field shots with a wide angle lens like this. 

Stopping down will produce a decent 14 bladed sunstar effect.

There isn’t much deviation from the standard formula here, and while I do think there’s room for improvement, I appreciate the great strengths here as well. This is a lightweight, compact lens that also has a very nice build and feel to it. There’s not much in terms of features, but think what is most attractive is the compact size and light weight of a lens with both a large maximum aperture and a very wide angle of view.

Sigma 10-18mm DN Autofocus

Sigma continues to utilize a stepping focus motor (STM) in these smaller lenses as the elements are smaller and lighter than lenses and don’t require the higher torque that some of their large aperture full frame or sports oriented lenses. My experience with all of the Sigma DN lenses to date has been that I prefer their autofocus behavior on Sony than to Fuji, and that continues to be the case here.  To be fair, however, a large part of that is that I prefer Sony’s autofocus on their cameras, and that obviously impacts the performance of a lens. That caveat aside, I was generally pleased with the performance of the 10-18X even on Fuji. The STM focus motor gets the job done, and focus was fast, quiet, and accurate during my tests.

I didn’t really pick up on any focus sound at any point, and focus was responsive enough to pick up on my bratty little Bengal:

I did my autofocus tests indoors and outdoors, and found AF-C autofocus changes to be near instant moving from a close to a distant subject. Focus speed for stills is very good.

I also tested Eye AF tracking, and found that autofocus stayed “sticky” on Nala’s eyes as either she moved towards me or I (and the camera) moved around tracking here.

I had good autofocus results even when shooting backlit subjects, like these morning frost needles forming on bare branches.

Wide angle lenses put less stress on their autofocus systems because depth of field tends to be very large unless you are extremely close to your subject. I have zero complaints about the performance here for stills, however, as focus was quick and confident.

On the video front my findings were mostly good, though not quite as flawless as on Sony. My autofocus focus pulls test showed that there is plenty of speed to make focus transitions, but there is a common problem on Fuji – the autofocus confidence just isn’t as high. The focus pulls themselves go fast, but then there is a little bit of hunting and settling before focus locks on the new subject.

On a positive note focus breathing is fairly low.

My “hand test” (where I block the view of my face with my hand and then move the hand to allow focus to pop back to the eye) went fairly well. I saw less hunting in that scenario, and focus moved and locked with more confidence. This doesn’t surprise me at all, as Fuji has been operating with the same basic focus system for years, but have upgraded it in this last generation of cameras through AI tracking. When modern Fuji cameras have a trackable subject in the frame (something the AI processor is programmed to detect), autofocus works quite well. It works less well when there isn’t a readily identifiable and trackable subject.

For that reason Fujifilm vloggers will enjoy this lens. It’s small and compact and thus “gimbals well”, but because the focus system has an eye to focus on, focus was effective even when I was on the move or spinning around. Here’s a screenshot from one of those shots.

I did test to see if this was a parfocal lens and was pleasantly surprised to find that it was. I could focus at 10mm and zoom into 18mm and find that focus was still correct. That will help with video work.

In conclusion, autofocus isn’t quite as sophisticated on Fuji as it is on Sony, but I’ll also say that this has been one of the better zooms that I’ve worked on Fuji for autofocus performance.

Sigma 10-18X Image Quality

The Sigma 10-18X sports a relatively complex optical formula for such a small lens. There are 13 elements in 10 groups, and that includes number of exotic elements like 4 aspherical elements (including a large GM aspherical concave lens as the front element), 3 FLD elements, and one SLD element. The MTF chart and comparison shows a significant improvement over the older Sigma 10-20mm F3.5 that the was equivalent lens for DSLRs. The MTF chart shows a very strong center and midframe at both ends of the zoom range with minimal falloff in the corners at 10mm. There’s a stronger falloff at 18mm in the corners.

Real world results often look excellent to my eye, with excellent detail and contrast…though as per usual, the 40MP sensor of the X-H2 proves a high hurdle to climb if you start to closely analyze things.

We’ll work through the chart results by first looking at distortion and vignette.  Here’s a look at the before and after of manual corrections of both at 10mm:

I didn’t expect to see any real difference in distortion (it’s the same optical formula), but I’ve noticed a trend with lenses that I test on both Sony and then on Fuji that vignette is typically heavier on Fuji. I suspect it has something to do with the smaller diameter of the lens mount.

At 10mm there is a significant but not extreme amount of barrel distortion. I used a +25 to correct it, though there is a mild mustache pattern left after manual correction. The standard profile does a cleaner job of correcting the distortion. On Sony I needed a +53 to correct the vignette, but on Fuji I had to max out the slider (+100). That’s close to two stops higher on Fuji.

So how about the “telephoto” end of the zoom range?

The distortion flips to pincushion style at 18mm but corrected easily with a -7. , but it was very linear and easy to cleanly correct for. Vignette was a little lighter but still required a +80 to correct (+40 more than on Sony). Fuji’s correction profiles (Sigma gets full support here) work fine in camera for the lens for JPEG and video, and there is already a correction profile available for Lightroom/ACR that will clean things up nicely for RAW files. Here’s a look at a SOOC JPEG file of a brick wall at 10mm – no distortion or vignette to be seen:

Clearly no insurmountable odds there.

How about chromatic aberrations?

I saw very little longitudinal chromatic aberrations before and after the plane of focus. You can see very little fringing in all of the shiny metal and crystal bits on this decorative reindeer.

Lateral Chromatic Aberrations usually show up along the edges of the frame as fringing on either side of high contrast areas, but that doesn’t seem to be an issue here. Winter is the most obvious time to see issues with LaCA due to all the bare branches, but I don’t see any issues here even with corrections turned off.

That’s good news, as you are far more likely to see lateral CA on a wide angle zoom in real world images than you are to see longitudinal CA.

So how about resolution and contrast?  All chart tests done with a the X-H2 (70MP) using a tripod and a two second delay. Here’s a look at my test chart:

And here are the crops (at roughly 200% magnification) from the center, mid-frame, and extreme corner shot at 10mm and at F2.8:

In the center of the frame we can see that the Sigma 10-18X has no problem. It still looks fantastic. Mid-frame is a little murkier, though the corner look relatively good. Stop down to F4 and the mid-frame and the corners take a nice leap forwards:

There’s a bit more on tap at F5.6, so that means that real world landscape images at 10mm will look very nice all across the frame.

Diffraction comes early on pixel dense cameras like the X-H2, so I actually found F8 to have very slightly less contrast compared with F5.6. After F8 things go downhill fast as diffraction robs away contrast and acuity. By F22 (minimum aperture) the image looks very soft.

I would recommend sticking with F5.8-F8 for landscape work on a high resolution camera to get your best results.

I slightly preferred the overall image quality at 12mm. The center is about the same as 10mm, but the results in the midframe and corners are clearly better.

Real world 12mm images look great, though the absolute edges aren’t pin sharp on 40MP.

14mm is very similar to 12mm in contrast, though I didn’t feel like it resolved some of the fine lines quite as well. Take a look at the number 2 and the area around it on the right as compared to the left (12mm).

There’s a clear improvement at F4, however, and landscape apertures look pretty great in real world images.

16mm is mostly similar to 14mm with perhaps a little better detail and contrast…particularly along the edges of the frame.

I did note a mild regression at 18mm in my Sony E-mount review, but I’m seeing it less here on Fuji. As I compare 16mm and 18mm across the frame I see some give and take. Some areas favor 16mm, others favor 18mm. The performance is mostly similar between the two focal lengths, making the overall sharpness and contrast very consistent across this zoom range.

I chose this crop because it illustrates the challenge well – there is very little to distinguish between the two focal lengths…even side by side and magnified to 200%!

As before, you can see some improved contrast a bit more detail by stopping the lens down. I found a more significant different at F5.6 than at F4. By F5.6 the improved contrast is very noticeable.

The two ends of the zoom range are the most important, as you’ll often be in situations where you want to go as wide as possible, while the 18mm end will give both the maximum reach but also will be the go to for up close work…like in the shot of these mushrooms.

You can see from the crop that while the amount of detail at F2.8 on a high resolution sensor isn’t pin-sharp, it is sharp enough to work in most situations.

You are also most likely to get visible bokeh at 18mm. This image allows us to look at both the sharpness of the subject and the bokeh beyond.

At a pixel level I can see that contrast doesn’t “wow” me, but at every other viewing magnification the image looks great. There’s no “bleeding” around the edges of the leaves due to low contrast, and the quality of the bokeh is pretty nice. Wide angle lenses are almost never going to give you amazing bokeh (that’s just not their strength), but I would be happy in getting images like the one above.

Here’s another bokeh shot of a field of frost covered sweet fern. You can see a bit of busyness in the transition zone as things move out of focus (some outlining), but beyond that the bokeh gets fairly soft and creamy.

Flare resistance was fairly good in most situations, with good contrast and only minor issues with ghosting. That performance was pretty similar to what I saw on Sony. Here’s a fresh shot that shows good flare resistance.

I did see some “flashing” with the sun right out of the frame when shooting video, though I did find it fairly artistic and not distracting. Again, that’s a subjective evaluation, and I would recommend watching the video review to draw more conclusions for yourself. Here’s a few screenshots to show the effect.

Overall my feelings were very positive about the flare resistance.

The weather was much gloomier during my time with the X-mount version of the lens as compared to the earlier Sony version, but I continue to find colors pleasing on Fuji.

Even on a gloomy day the colors have a nice level of saturation.

The Sigma 10-18X is able to navigate the bump to 40MP on Fuji better than most zoom lenses I have tested on the sensor…but the difference in apparent sharpness at 200% comparing 26MP on Sony with 40MP on Fuji is pretty astounding. Look at the difference in corner performance at 10mm here:

That Fuji sensor is a monster for making lenses look softer at a pixel level, but that’s not on Sigma. Compared to other lenses, it actually holds up well. Here’s the Tamron 11-20mm F2.8 RXD (another lens that looked very good on Sony but softer on Fuji), and you can see that the Sigma definitely better.

All things considered, I feel like there is a lot of optical performance here for such a small package. You can see many more beautiful images by visiting the image gallery here.

Conclusion

The Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN is a very welcome addition to the Fuji X-mount wide angle options. It’s the lightest and most compact while also being the cheapest and one of the best performers optically. It’s a lens that I would personally consider.

I would like to see Sigma increase the feature set of their Contemporary lenses, particularly when it comes to weather sealing, but they also have the advantage of having the lowest price point of competing lenses. This does help make that more acceptable.

Wide angle lenses like this are great for being able to get dramatic images, and this 10-18X is a great pairing for Sigma’s existing 18-50mm DN if you are looking for a lightweight F2.8 zoom. I would love to see Sigma also tackle an APS-C specific telephoto zoom to compete with Fuji’s 50-140mm in the future. I continue to question if Fuji took the quest for high resolution on APS-C a little too far, but the Sigma 10-18X handles the challenge as well as any zoom I’ve tested thus far.

Pros:

  • Extremely compact lens for having F2.8 aperture
  • Unique new hood design
  • Manual focus and zoom rings move smoothly
  • Quick and quiet autofocus
  • Low focus breathing
  • Seems to be parfocal
  • Strong optics throughout zoom range
  • Fringing well controlled
  • Good color
  • Good flare resistance
  • Good price

Cons:

  • Significant barrel distortion at 10mm
  • Weather sealed only at mount
  • No extra features

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GEAR USED:

Purchase the Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DN @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany

Purchase the Sigma 18-50mm F2.8 DN @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany

Purchase the Fujifilm X-H2 @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Fujifilm X-T5 @ B&H Photo | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Find it Used at KEH 

Purchase the Fujifilm X-S20 @ B&H Photo | Adorama  | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

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Keywords:  Sigma, 10-18mm, Sigma 10-18mm, F2.8, DC , DN, APS-C, Fuji X-mount, Sony E-mount, Leica L-mount, Sigma 10-18 Review, Sigma 10-18mm Review, Sigma 10-18 DN, Review, Sony a6700, Sony a6400, Sony a7RV, Fujifilm X-H2, Review, Hands On, Dustin Abbott, Real World, Comparison, Sharpness, Bokeh, Flare Resistance, Autofocus, Image Quality, Sample Images, Video, Portrait, Photography, let the light in, #letthelightin, DA, Weather Sealing, #SIGMA, #SIGMA1018mmContemporary, #SIGMAContemporary, #SIGMADCDN

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DN X-Mount Gallery

Dustin Abbott

December 5th, 2023

When I reviewed the Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DN a few months ago I expressed an interest in revisiting it on Fuji. Fuji’s cameras with the 40MP X-Trans sensors are serious disruptors in this space, and, while I own and love the Fujifilm X-H2, I’m still not decided as to whether they haven’t taken resolution on APS-C a bit too far, as everything but the most of elite of lenses struggle to resolve it. Thus a lens that performs well on Sony (at 26MP) may not look nearly as good at 40MP on Fuji. In fact, I have yet to see a zoom lens yet that really excels at 40MP on APS-C; I have a short list of lenses that keep up with the sensor, and they are all primes. Does the 10-18mm X-mount version handle this transition? You can see my thoughts in the video review below or by reading my text review.

Follow Me @ YouTube | Patreon |  Instagram | Facebook | DA Merchandise | Flickr | 500px

Thanks to Gentec (Sigma’ distributer in Canada) for sending me a review loaner of this lens. As always, this is a completely independent review. *The tests and most of the photos that I share as a part of my review cycle have been done on the 40MP Fujifilm X-H2 that I reviewed here.

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This year we’ve seen two important DC DN lenses, including the excellent 23mm F1.4 DC DN and this new 10-18mm DN, a wide angle zoom lens with a fast maximum aperture of F2.8. This will certainly be a welcome addition to Fuji shooters as there are relatively few wide angle zooms to choose from, and none that quite match the combination of compact size, price, and performance of the 10-18X.

The Sigma 10-18mm DN is the sixth lens in this series. Here’s a look at the DC (APS-C) DN (mirrorless) lineup thus far.

  1. Sigma 16mm F1.4
  2. Sigma 23mm F1.4
  3. Sigma 30mm F1.4
  4. Sigma 56mm F1.4
  5. Sigma 10-18mm F2.8
  6. Sigma 18-50mm F2.8

Sigma’s DC DN lenses have all fallen under the umbrella of their Contemporary lineup, and while Sigma has proven willing to experiment with new features and design elements within the ART and Sport lineups, the Contemporary lenses have all stuck to a fairly rigid design formula. That continues to be the case here, so this little lens mostly looks and handles pretty similarly to other lenses in the lineup.

There’s some good and bad with this, but what certainly isn’t bad is that you can capture some absolutely amazing images with this little lens.

Yes, the colors were just that rich; the Sigma has captured them accurately.

This is a useful zoom range, allowing you to go from extremely wide at 10mm (15mm full frame equivalent) through the various steps to 18mm (27mm full frame equivalent).

The Sigma 10-18mm X-mount lens carries a price tag of $599 USD. Should this lens jump to the top of your list when you are looking for a wide angle zoom lens for your camera? Here’s the original review for more information.

Photos of the Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 X-Mount

Photos Taken with the Sigma 10-18mm X-Mount

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GEAR USED:

Purchase the Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DN @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany

Purchase the Sigma 18-50mm F2.8 DN @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany

Purchase the Fujifilm X-H2 @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Fujifilm X-T5 @ B&H Photo | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Find it Used at KEH 

Purchase the Fujifilm X-S20 @ B&H Photo | Adorama  | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

Want to support this channel? Use these affiliate links to shop at: B&H Photo | Amazon | Adorama | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Ebay | Make a donation via Paypal

Buy DA Merchandise https://bit.ly/TWIMerch

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Keywords:  Sigma, 10-18mm, Sigma 10-18mm, F2.8, DC , DN, APS-C, Fuji X-mount, Sony E-mount, Leica L-mount, Sigma 10-18 Review, Sigma 10-18mm Review, Sigma 10-18 DN, Review, Sony a6700, Sony a6400, Sony a7RV, Fujifilm X-H2, Review, Hands On, Dustin Abbott, Real World, Comparison, Sharpness, Bokeh, Flare Resistance, Autofocus, Image Quality, Sample Images, Video, Portrait, Photography, let the light in, #letthelightin, DA, Weather Sealing, #SIGMA, #SIGMA1018mmContemporary, #SIGMAContemporary, #SIGMADCDN

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN Review

Dustin Abbott

October 10th, 2023

When I started reviewing Sony, there were no Sigma E-mount lenses other than a few APS-C lenses that have since been discontinued. Sigma then did a big drop of ported EF mount lenses from their ART series to E-mount, though most of those have been replaced with new DN lenses. Sigma uses the DN designation for their lenses that have been specifically designed for mirrorless, and in less than four year they have released nearly 30 DN lenses. That’s right! The Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN Contemporary lens is the 29th DN lens, and the newly announced 70-200mm F2.8 Sport will be the 30th DN lens my count. That averages to more than 7 lenses per year, which makes Sigma easily the most prolific lens maker that I’m aware of during that time. The majority of those lenses have been full frame lenses, however, and we’ve seen fewer of their APS-C specific designs, which Sigma designates with DC. But this year we’ve seen two important DC DN lenses, including the excellent 23mm F1.4 DC DN and this new 10-18mm DN, a wide angle zoom lens with a fast maximum aperture of F2.8. This will certainly be a welcome addition to Sony, Fuji, and Leica L-mount shooters…particularly if the lens proves to be a good performer. We’ll try to answer that question in both the video review and the text review below.

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Thanks to Gentec (Sigma’ distributer in Canada) for sending me a review loaner of this lens. As always, this is a completely independent review. *The tests and most of the photos that I share as a part of my review cycle have been done on the 26MP APS-C mode of the Sony a7RV.

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The Sigma 10-18mm DN is the sixth lens in this series. Here’s a look at the DC (APS-C) DN (mirrorless) lineup thus far.

  1. Sigma 16mm F1.4
  2. Sigma 23mm F1.4
  3. Sigma 30mm F1.4
  4. Sigma 56mm F1.4
  5. Sigma 10-18mm F2.8
  6. Sigma 18-50mm F2.8

Sigma’s DC DN lenses have all fallen under the umbrella of their Contemporary lineup, and while Sigma has proven willing to experiment with new features and design elements within the ART and Sport lineups, the Contemporary lenses have all stuck to a fairly rigid design formula. That continues to be the case here, so this little lens mostly looks and handles pretty similarly to other lenses in the lineup.

There’s some good and bad with this, but what certainly isn’t bad is that you can capture some absolutely amazing images with this little lens.

Yes, the colors were just that rich; the Sigma has captured them accurately.

This is a useful zoom range, allowing you to go from extremely wide at 10mm (15mm full frame equivalent) through the various steps to 18mm (27mm full frame equivalent).

The Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN carries a price tag of $599 USD. Should this lens jump to the top of your list when you are looking for a wide angle zoom lens for your camera?

Sigma 10-18mm DN Build and Handling

Though Sigma has released a LOT of lenses over the past few years, this is (surprisingly) only the second APS-C specific zoom lens released for mirrorless cameras. The first was the 18-50mm F2.8 DN that I reviewed almost exactly two years ago. I quite liked that little zoom, and actually plan to revisit it with a Fuji X-mount review in the near future. The 10-18mm provides an obvious compliment to that lens, allowing for coverage from 10-50mm between the two lenses, or the equivalent of 15-75mm on full frame. This is all with a maximum aperture of F2.8, which is obviously very useful. What’s more, both of these lenses are extremely compact and light, making them very easy to travel with as a kit. The new 10-18mm DN weighs just 255g in Sony E-mount, or 9 oz. It is 72.2mm in diameter and 64mm in length (2.8 x 2.5″).

Up front we have the ability to use traditional filters in a very standard 67mm size.

As more and more lenses are released on these platforms (particularly on E-mount), it has become increasingly common to see more unique focal lengths and zoom ranges instead of just retreading the traditional versions. That means that doing a direct comparison between various lenses becomes more difficult as they don’t have all have the same focal range and aperture combinations. On APS-C we essentially have two paths – the F2.8 path that has a constrained zoom range to keep the size, weight, and cost down, or the F4 path that allows for a bit more zoom range but at the cost of the brighter aperture. The closest competitor to the Sigma 10-18mm DN will be the Tamron 11-20mm F2.8 RXD; it has a bit more zoom range, but, importantly, it is not as wide. It’s easier to crop in enough to account for that 2mm on the telephoto end, but you can’t always step back to get more in the frame. Here’s a look at these various competitors and their costs.

You’ll note that the Sigma is the cheapest of their four lenses at $599, and also manages to be the second smallest and lightest despite going wide (10mm) and having a larger maximum aperture. It also has the smallest zoom ratio, though not by much. I suspect that many will find the weaknesses an acceptable tradeoff for the significant strengths.

As noted, Sigma’s Contemporary branded lenses have followed a very definite design path. Sigma’s build quality on these lenses is quite nice.  The aesthetic and feel of the lens isn’t really different than their ART series. The design language and materials are quite similar…just smaller.

But where the ART and Contemporary lenses diverge is in the features. The key difference is that the DC DN zoom lenses are essentially featureless.  There is no aperture ring, no switches, no iris lock, no declicking of the aperture, no focus hold button. Now, to be fair, the Tamron lens (probably the primary competitor) also lacks these features. The Fuji lenses XF 10-24mm does have an aperture ring, while the little Sony manages to have a focus hold button, AF/MF switch, and also PowerZoom functionality.

I’ve seen this happen before; a lens maker locks themselves into a certain standard of features for a series of lenses, but then the market shifts and that design philosophy is no longer acceptable.

Case in point is Sigma’s approach to weather sealing on the Contemporary lineup. The 10-18mm DN has a weather sealing gasket at the lens mount but no internal seals…just like the other DC DN lenses. This is at least one area where the Sigma falls behind the competitors – the Tamron 11-20mm, Sony 10-20mm, and Fuji 10-24mm all feature fully weather sealed designs.

Enough about what isn’t here, however. Let’s focus on what is here. The is a very short lens (just 62mm), so that means there is a lot to fit in on a zoom lens. Sigma’s design is slightly unique in that the manual focus ring is actually the closer of the two. It occupies the center of the barrel, while the zoom ring is on a flared out section near the front of the lens. Like other lenses designed for mirrorless cameras, this is a focus-by-wire system in which input from the focus ring is routed through the focus motor.  It is actually the focus motor that moves the elements, making manual focus more of an emulation than a direct movement of the elements.  Some lenses pull this off better than others, and the Sigma 10-18mm DN is one of them. There is good weight/damping on the focus ring, and no visible steps during focus changes. I didn’t notice any focus lag either; the action on the ring and the movement of focus seemed directly linked.  I will note that the lens will automatically alert the body to magnify the image when you are manually focusing, which is a big help in visually confirming focus.  

There is about 10mm between the focus ring and the beginning of the flared section that leads to the zoom ring. I appreciate some space there, as that was one of my complaints about the Sony 10-20mm; there was almost no room between the two rings on that lens, and it was easy to inadvertently move the wrong ring. There’s a very definite difference between two rings and position on the Sigma, though there is a different problem. At the fully retracted position (there is a slight external zoom action), the lens hood fits so tightly against the zoom ring that there isn’t a lot of space for your thumb to fit on the narrow ring. If you happen to have longer fingernails, you might actually find zooming a bit of a challenge.

The zoom action itself is very smooth. This is a “reverse zoom” in terms of the retraction; the inner barrel is fully retracted at 18mm and extends the furthest at 10mm, though the barrel extension is only about 10mm.

Sigma is experimenting with a new lens hood design for this lens. Rather than bayoneting into place, it is actually just a push on design. You still need to line up the markings on the hood and the barrel, but then you just push the lens hood into place rather than rotate it. A spring/lever mechanism holds the hood locked into place. You can release it by just doing a slight rotation to the left.

The primary “pro” of this design is it allows them to the make the lens hood a little thinner as there doesn’t need to be room in the hood design for the bayonet action. Sigma touts the fact that while the filter size of the 10-18mm is 12mm larger than the 18-50mm (67 vs 55mm), the diameter of the lens hood is only 3.8mm larger.

If you want to reverse the hood for storage, you now line up an arrow on the lens hood with the previous mark on the lens barrel and push it forward. Removing it simply requires a similar slight rotation to the left. As per usual, Sigma’s lens hoods are just a little bit nicer than the competition, including some soft-touch materials, texture variations, and lens information imprinted on them.

The 10-80mm DN has two different minimum focusing distances for the wide and telephoto ends of the zoom range. At 10mm you can focus as closely as 11.6cm (4.6″) and can get as high as a 0.25x magnification…though you have to be pretty much right on top of your subject to get it. 

At 18mm that disance extends to 19.1cm (4.6″) and the magnification drops to just 0.14x…though shots at 18mm are a whole lot easier to get!

The aperture iris is electromagnetic and controlled from within the camera (no aperture ring).  It has seven rounded aperture blades that do a fairly good job of retaining a circular shape even with the lens stopped down, though frankly you won’t have a lot of opportunity to shoot shallow depth of field shots with a wide angle lens like this. 

Stopping down will produce a decent 14 bladed sunstar effect.

There isn’t much deviation from the standard formula here, and while I do think there’s room for improvement, I appreciate the great strengths here as well. This is a lightweight, compact lens that also has a very nice build and feel to it. I think people will love how compact the lens is (it is 22mm shorter than the Tamron!) and thus how easy it is to bring along.

Sigma 10-18mm DN Autofocus

Sigma continues to utilize a stepping focus motor (STM) in these smaller lenses as the elements are smaller and lighter than lenses and don’t require the higher torque that some of their large aperture full frame or sports oriented lenses.  The STM focus motor is sufficient here, however, as focus was fast, quiet, and accurate during my tests.

I didn’t really pick up on any focus sound at any point, and focus was responsive enough to pick up on my bratty little Bengal:

I did my autofocus tests indoors and outdoors, and found AF-C autofocus changes near instant moving from a close to a distant subject.

I also tested Eye AF tracking, and found that autofocus stayed “sticky” on Nala’s eyes even though they were closed for most of my moving around.

I had good autofocus results even when shooting backlit subjects, like these fall leaves starting to change.

Wide angle lenses put less stress on their autofocus systems because depth of field tends to be very large unless you are extremely close to your subject. I have zero complaints about the performance here for stills, however, as focus was quick and confident.

My autofocus focus pulls test went very well, with quick, smooth pulls from one subject to another. There is very little focus breathing with the lens, so there is little to draw attention to the focus transitions other than a different subject being in focus.

Likewise my “hand test” where I block the view of my face with my hand and then move the hand to allow focus to pop back to the eye went well. Transitions were smooth and confident.

That translates well to focus transitions in real world video as well. I could move from one subject to another with smooth focus transitions that make for nice video. There was a little less consistency of focus (focus moved around a little) as compared to similar tests done a few days before on the Tamron 17-50mm F4 VXD for full frame (my review here), though that lens was equipped with a higher end linear style focus motor. These focus “misses” were less obvious due to the minimal focus breathing – focus could move around a little without drawing the eye.

I also did a similar sequence where I walked in reverse with the lens on a gimbal as Nala followed me. Overall the results were positive, but again I did notice that there were more inconsistencies and that focus was sometimes changing and readjusting. It does go to show that there is definitely some advantage to the higher torque linear style motors. In general, however, I would say that the focus for video was quite good. You can see a screenshot from that video above.

Vloggers will enjoy this lens. It’s small and compact, but I also found video AF to be nicely sticky on my fact even when I was on the move or spinning around. Here’s a screenshot from one of those shots.

I did test to see if this was a parfocal lens and was pleasantly surprised to find that it was. I could focus at 10mm and zoom into 18mm and find that focus was still correct. That will help with video work.

So while focus isn’t perfect, it is overall very good on Sony. What focus issues I did find I had to go looking for.

Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN Image Quality

The Sigma 10-18mm DN sports a relatively complex optical formula for such a small lens. There are 13 elements in 10 groups, and that includes number of exotic elements like 4 aspherical elements (including a large GM aspherical concave lens as the front element), 3 FLD elements, and one SLD element. The MTF chart and comparison shows a significant improvement over the older Sigma 10-20mm F3.5 that the was equivalent lens for DSLRs. The MTF chart shows a very strong center and midframe at both ends of the zoom range with minimal falloff in the corners at 10mm. There’s a stronger falloff at 18mm in the corners.

Real world results look great, to my eye, with excellent detail and contrast.

We’ll work through the chart results by first looking at distortion and vignette.  Here’s a look at the before and after of manual corrections to both at 10mm, then at 14mm, and finally at 18mm.

There’s really not much to see outside of the 10mm position, where there is a significant but not extreme amount of barrel distortion. I used a +21 to correct it, though there is a mild mustache pattern left after manual correction. The standard profile does a cleaner job of correcting the distortion. There is about two stops of vignette that required a +53 to correct for.

At 14mm there is little to worry about. Distortion is almost nonexistent (I used a -1 to correct the tiniest amount of pincushion distortion) and dialed in a +40 to correct the vignette.

There was a little more pincushion distortion at 18mm (a -7 to correct), but it was very linear and easy to cleanly correct for. Vignette remained at the +40 correction point. There’s nothing extreme or difficult about any of this; this is a good performance for a wide angle zoom. I can take the weakest point (10mm), shoot an interior space, and see a clean correction by using the correction profile.

So far so good.

How about chromatic aberrations?

I saw very little longitudinal chromatic aberrations before and after the plane of focus. You can see is no fringing on the shiny surfaces after the key here.

Lateral Chromatic Aberrations usually show up along the edges of the frame as fringing on either side of high contrast areas, but that doesn’t seem to be an issue here. I don’t see any fringing up in these branches at the top of the frame.

That’s good news, as you are far more likely to see lateral CA on a wide angle zoom in real world images than you are to see longitudinal CA.

So how about resolution and contrast?  All chart tests done with a Sony a7RV in APS-C mode (26MP) using a tripod and a two second timer. Here’s a look at my test chart:

And here are the crops (at roughly 200% magnification) from the center, mid-frame, and extreme corner shot at 10mm and at F2.8:

We see that sharpness is extremely good all across the frame. Even the corners look quite good.

That means that real world landscape images at 10mm will look very nice all across the frame.

I don’t see much difference when stopping down to F4 other than a very slight contrast boost towards out the outer edges of the frame. I see a slight bit more at F5.6:

I didn’t see any further improvement at F8, with F5.6 and F8 looking near identical. After F8 you will start to see some regression due to diffraction. By F22 (minimum aperture), diffraction has really softened the image.

I slightly preferred the overall image quality at 12mm. The results have slightly more detail and contrast, and because of lower vignette and distortion the corner results are a little cleaner and brighter.

Real world 12mm images look great.

14mm is essentially identical to 12mm, with both focal lengths delivering excellent sharpness across the frame even at F2.8. Here’s a 14mm favorite:

16mm is perhaps just a tiny bit better at F2.8, which is to say, excellent. Images look rich and detailed at 16mm:

There is a mild regression in the corners at 18mm as indicated in the MTF charters, though sharpness is still very high in most of the frame.

There is actually more room for improvement when stopped down at 18mm, with a significant improvement at F4 and a bit more at F5.6. By this point the corners are nice and crisp.

I was very happy with my real world results at 18mm:

You are most likely to get visible bokeh at 18mm. This image allows us to look at both the sharpness of the subject and the bokeh beyond.

The sharpness on the subject is excellent even at F2.8, with good detail and contrast. Bokeh is also fairly good here, though with a little more outlining than I would prefer in some of the specular highlights. There’s a light swirl effect, which people have varying opinions of. I personally don’t mind it.

Here’s another bokeh shot.

It’s not amazingly creamy or anything, but this is also a wide angle zoom. The bokeh is acceptably good. Lenses like this are more about what’s in focus and less about what’s NOT in focus. If you are more than a few feet away from your subject, most things are going to be in focus anyway. Here’s a shot taken from just three feet away (inside the cab of an old tractor):

Flare resistance was fairly good in most situations, with good contrast and only minor issues with ghosting.

I did see some “flashing” with the sun right out of the frame when shooting video, though I did find it fairly artistic and not distracting. Again, that’s a subjective evaluation, and I would recommend watching the video review to draw more conclusions for yourself. Here’s a few screenshots to show the effect.

Overall my feelings were very positive about the flare resistance.

Unfortunately a protracted storm system came in during my review time with the lens and I was unable to test coma. I hopefully will be able to rectify that during my time with a Fuji X-mount version in the future.

What I did have, however, was some really dramatic storm light that allowed me to capture some incredible colors.

Color rendition looked good even in less dramatic conditions.

I’m interested in seeing how the Sigma 10-18mm DN survives the much more pixel rich Fujifilm X-H2 and its 40MP sensor, but here on the 26MP of current Sony sensors, this is a very strong performance. I feel like there is a lot of optical performance here for such a small package. You can see many more beautiful images by visiting the image gallery here.

Conclusion

The Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN is a very welcome addition to the various platforms that it comes to. Even on Sony, where I’ve tested for this review, there is a lot of space for a compact wide angle zoom like this. Sigma has been very selective with the APS-C zooms that they’ve released to date on mirrorless, but this was a smart move. They’ve opted to go for a slightly reduced zoom range to allow them to maintain a small size, large maximum aperture, and optical purity throughout.

I would like to see Sigma increase the feature set of their Contemporary lenses, particularly when it comes to weather sealing, but they also have the advantage of having the lowest price point of competing lenses. This does help make that more acceptable.

Wide angle lenses like this are great for being able to get dramatic images, and this 10-18mm DN is a great pairing for Sigma’s existing 18-50mm DN. I’m hard pressed to think of a better option for APS-C shooters at the moment, particularly if you value having an F2.8 aperture.

Pros:

  • Extremely compact lens for having F2.8 aperture
  • Unique new hood design
  • Manual focus and zoom rings move smoothly
  • Quick and quiet autofocus
  • Low focus breathing
  • Seems to be parfocal
  • Strong optics throughout zoom range
  • Fringing well controlled
  • Good color
  • Good flare resistance
  • Good price

Cons:

  • Significant barrel distortion at 10mm
  • Weather sealed only at mount
  • No extra features

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GEAR USED:

Purchase the Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DN @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany

Purchase the Sony a7RV @ B&H Photo | AdoramaAmazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a7IV @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony Alpha 1 @ Camera Canada | B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Sony Canada | Amazon CanadaAmazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

Purchase a Sony a9M2 @ B&H Photo | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

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Keywords:  Sigma, 10-18mm, Sigma 10-18mm, F2.8, DC , DN, APS-C, Fuji X-mount, Sony E-mount, Leica L-mount, Sigma 10-18 Review, Sigma 10-18mm Review, Sigma 10-18 DN, Review, Sony a6700, Sony a6400, Sony a7RV, Fujifilm X-H2, Review, Hands On, Dustin Abbott, Real World, Comparison, Sharpness, Bokeh, Flare Resistance, Autofocus, Image Quality, Sample Images, Video, Portrait, Photography, let the light in, #letthelightin, DA, Weather Sealing, #SIGMA, #SIGMA1018mmContemporary, #SIGMAContemporary, #SIGMADCDN

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN Gallery

Dustin Abbott

October 10th, 2023

When I started reviewing Sony, there were no Sigma E-mount lenses other than a few APS-C lenses that have since been discontinued. Sigma then did a big drop of ported EF mount lenses from their ART series to E-mount, though most of those have been replaced with new DN lenses. Sigma uses the DN designation for their lenses that have been specifically designed for mirrorless, and in less than four year they have released nearly 30 DN lenses. That’s right! The Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN Contemporary lens is the 29th DN lens, and the newly announced 70-200mm F2.8 Sport will be the 30th DN lens my count. That averages to more than 7 lenses per year, which makes Sigma easily the most prolific lens maker that I’m aware of during that time. The majority of those lenses have been full frame lenses, however, and we’ve seen fewer of their APS-C specific designs, which Sigma designates with DC. But this year we’ve seen two important DC DN lenses, including the excellent 23mm F1.4 DC DN and this new 10-18mm DN, a wide angle zoom lens with a fast maximum aperture of F2.8. This will certainly be a welcome addition to Sony, Fuji, and Leica L-mount shooters…particularly if the lens proves to be a good performer.

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Thanks to Gentec (Sigma’ distributer in Canada) for sending me a review loaner of this lens. As always, this is a completely independent review. *The tests and most of the photos that I share as a part of my review cycle have been done on the 26MP APS-C mode of the Sony a7RV.

__________________________________________________________________________________________________

The Sigma 10-18mm DN is the sixth lens in this series. Here’s a look at the DC (APS-C) DN (mirrorless) lineup thus far.

  1. Sigma 16mm F1.4
  2. Sigma 23mm F1.4
  3. Sigma 30mm F1.4
  4. Sigma 56mm F1.4
  5. Sigma 10-18mm F2.8
  6. Sigma 18-50mm F2.8

Sigma’s DC DN lenses have all fallen under the umbrella of their Contemporary lineup, and while Sigma has proven willing to experiment with new features and design elements within the ART and Sport lineups, the Contemporary lenses have all stuck to a fairly rigid design formula. That continues to be the case here, so this little lens mostly looks and handles pretty similarly to other lenses in the lineup.

There’s some good and bad with this, but what certainly isn’t bad is that you can capture some absolutely amazing images with this little lens.

Yes, the colors were just that rich; the Sigma has captured them accurately.

This is a useful zoom range, allowing you to go from extremely wide at 10mm (15mm full frame equivalent) through the various steps to 18mm (27mm full frame equivalent).

The Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN carries a price tag of $599 USD. Should this lens jump to the top of your list when you are looking for a wide angle zoom lens for your camera? You can find out either in my video review linked above or by reading my text review here.

Photos of the Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DN

Images taken with the Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN

__________________________________________________________________________________________________

GEAR USED:

Purchase the Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DN @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany

Purchase the Sony a7RV @ B&H Photo | AdoramaAmazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a7IV @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony Alpha 1 @ Camera Canada | B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Sony Canada | Amazon CanadaAmazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

Purchase a Sony a9M2 @ B&H Photo | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

Want to support this channel? Use these affiliate links to shop at: B&H Photo | Amazon | Adorama | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Ebay | Make a donation via Paypal

Buy DA Merchandise https://bit.ly/TWIMerch

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Keywords:  Sigma, 10-18mm, Sigma 10-18mm, F2.8, DC , DN, APS-C, Fuji X-mount, Sony E-mount, Leica L-mount, Sigma 10-18 Review, Sigma 10-18mm Review, Sigma 10-18 DN, Review, Sony a6700, Sony a6400, Sony a7RV, Fujifilm X-H2, Review, Hands On, Dustin Abbott, Real World, Comparison, Sharpness, Bokeh, Flare Resistance, Autofocus, Image Quality, Sample Images, Video, Portrait, Photography, let the light in, #letthelightin, DA, Weather Sealing, #SIGMA, #SIGMA1018mmContemporary, #SIGMAContemporary, #SIGMADCDN

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 E-Mount Review

Dustin Abbott

July 28th, 2023

8 months ago I gave a glowing review of the Fuji X-mount version of the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2.   It was a stunningly good lens that managed to deliver next level improvements to the build and optics.  I knew then that a Sony E-mount version of the lens was inevitable, and it has finally arrived.  In what has become typical Viltrox fashion, it’s not the same lens ported over, however, but Viltrox has managed to deliver some key improvements that makes the Sony E-mount version even better than the Fuji version was.  This includes some new features like the ability to declick the aperture, a focus hold button, and their stylish new orange/red weather sealing gasket that they debuted on the amazing Viltrox AF 16mm F1.8 full frame lens (my review here). 

The Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 (hereafter referred to as the Pro 75E to distinguish the Sony version) is the first in their new series of “Pro” lenses, with a rumored 27mm F1.2 soon to follow.  The Pro series has a more upscale build and feature set along with truly premium options.  The Pro 75E is an APS-C lens, so the crop factor of the camera it is mounted on will affect its apparent aperture.   Sony’s E-mount has a crop factor of 1.5 which will make the lens behave something like 115mm on a full frame camera – a very, very intriguing focal length for portrait work, particularly with that extremely wide maximum aperture.  There isn’t really any true competition for this lens on Sony, as dedicated portrait telephoto lenses with fast maximum apertures for APS-C just haven’t existed.  You will love the Pro 75E; it has the ability to just crush backgrounds.

The only thing that held the Fuji version of the lens back was that the autofocus was only so-so (it has since been improved via firmware), but this new Sony version has the advantages of A) having had that additional development time to perfect the AF and B) the fact that Sony’s autofocus is better than Fuji’s at this point, particularly since my “APS-C” camera on Sony is the APS-C crop mode of the amazing Sony a7RV.  It’s 26MP in APS-C mode matches that of the new Sony a6700 but with the superior ergonomics and autofocus of Sony’s bigger full frame bodies. I was blown away with how much better autofocus was on the new Sony version, particularly with action sequences.  I could easily pick out a bird in flight at F1.2…and look at how amazing the results are! 

Viltrox claims near APO levels of correction for chromatic aberrations, which I’ve definitely verified to be true.  That’s extremely impressive in a lens with this wide of an aperture.  This Pro 75E has a tremendous amount of “bite” even at F1.2, and at its best the lens produces images that look much, much more expensive than the price tag suggests.

It seems absurd to say, but the last few lenses from Viltrox have left me with as much anticipation for their new releases as any brand out there, and part of that is that they continue to deliver incredible value.  The MSRP of the Pro 75E as it comes to market is $549USD (though if you buy it from the Viltrox store and use code DUSTINABBOTT you can get 10% any Viltrox product, including this lens), which makes this lens an absolute bargain relative to the performance.  The Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 in Sony E-mount isn’t quite perfect, but it is as about as close as it gets.   If you prefer to watch your reviews, you can check out my definitive video review…or just keep reading.

 

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Thanks to Viltrox for sending me an evaluation copy of the 75mm F1.2.   As always, this is a completely independent review. 

Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 Build and Handling

As noted in the intro, Viltrox is trying to move up into the next level of lens design, and that shows up here in the design and features of the AF 75mm F1.2.  The Fuji version of the lens was already a huge step up from previous Viltrox lenses, but the new Sony version is better still.  From one angle, the lenses look fairly similar, distinguished only by the slightly different badging and the fact that the lens mount alignment point is in a different place.

Rotate the lens to either side, however, and you’ll see the additional features of the Sony E-mount version:

That carries on to the bottom of the lens, where Viltrox has moved to their new eye-catching orange-red weather sealing gasket.

I like this move just like I liked when Zeiss did the same in Zeiss blue.  It feels stylish and unique, as if Viltrox is starting to develop their own identity.  That weather sealing isn’t just external, by the way; this is a thorough weather sealing, with nine seal points showing in the cutout diagram here:

This is  an internally focusing lens, so there is nothing that moves where dust might intrude. There’s also an HD-Nano multilayer coating on the front element to help with water and fingerprint resistance, making the front element easier to clean.  As always, however, “moisture-proof” does not mean “water-proof”, so don’t go crazy!

The focus hold button behaves in the same fashion as Sony lenses and is a welcome control point.  This puts the Pro 75E on equal footing with Sony’s more premium recent offerings on APS-C like the 15mm F1.4 G lens (my review here).  The declick option for the aperture ring is very welcome, as it does allow for smooth aperture racks, though, as usual, there’s a slight lag as the aperture iris motor reacts to feedback from the ring.

The lens has a beautiful 11 bladed aperture that keeps a wonderfully circular shape as you close it down.  You can see that even at F2.8 (2 1/3rds stop closed down) the aperture shape is nicely round.

There’s no getting around the fact that this is a very large lens that is, frankly, a better fit on my a7RV than it would be on the much smaller a6400 that I sold to help fund buying the a7RV!

It is 87mm/3.42″ in diameter (leaving a large but common 77mm front filter thread) and is 101mm/3.98″ in length – just like the Fuji version.  It weighs 675g or 23.8oz – just slightly heavier than the Fuji version, which makes sense, as the Sony mount is a bit larger than Fuji’s X-mount.  This is definitely a fairly large lens for APS-C.  I don’t find the lens particularly heavy, but my wife complained about the weight.  Your feelings on the weight of the lens will obviously have a lot to do with your tolerance for weight in lenses.  You can see that the Pro 75mm’s dwarf the Viltrox 56mm F1.4 in between them:

For me, personally, the performance of the lens makes the weight well worth it.

The design language is consistent with what I’ve seen from Viltrox recently, though now we have a “PRO” badge on the side rather than the “C” or “DF-RBW” that’s been on the side of some of their lenses.  Also new here is the AF/MF switch along with the focus hold button on the left side.  I always prefer having an AF/MF switch on the lens as the most direct and logical way to control that function.

There is a  “Viltrox” badge on the upper right side of the lens, and it feels like a nice balance to the Pro badge on the opposite side.  The Click/Declick switch on the Sony version is now beneath that badge.  

If you use the clicked version of the aperture you will find detents at each one third stop.  There is an “A’ position past F22 that will allow you to instead control aperture from within camera if you aren’t an aperture ring person.   Always lovely to see “F1.2” as an option on an aperture ring.

The manual focus ring is made of metal with tight ribbing.  It moves smoothly and with nice damping, though I felt like there was the slightly bit of “drag” from the focus motor.  I noticed a bit of stepping with the Fuji version, but that’s not the case here.  Focus is smooth and the image will automatically magnify to help visually confirm focus. 

Viltrox continues with a trend that other lens makers are now imitating by including a USB-C port in the lens mount that allows you to do firmware updates right to the lens.  I’m a fan of this approach, as it eliminates the need for a separate dock or lens station for firmware updates, and I find the process a little more intuitive than even doing firmware updates through the camera.  This allows Viltrox to future proof their lenses and continue to improve them through firmware.

There is no image stabilization, so you’ll have to rely on the stabilization from your camera body if it is so equipped.  The a7RV that I used for my review has great IBIS, so I had nice stable results in my tests.

If you look in the front of the lens, you’ll find a LOT of glass!

One lingering Viltrox weakness remains, and that is in minimum focus and maximum magnification performance.  MFD is 88cm (nearly 35″) and the resulting magnification is only 0.10x (is this the required magnification level for Viltrox lenses?)

On the plus side the up close performance is very strong even at F1.2, so there are still opportunities to get beautifully blurred out backgrounds, though it never seems you can get quite as close as what you would like.  

The lens hood is petal shaped and made of plastic.    Also included is a lens pouch with a padded leatherette bottom.

The only thing that anyone might object to in the build and handling department is the size of the Pro 75E.  It is otherwise pretty exceptional.

Viltrox Pro 75E Autofocus Performance

The Viltrox Pro 75mm is equipped with a Lead Screw-type STM (stepping motor), which is the better of the two different STM designs.  The challenge with a lens with such large elements is that they are heavier and thus require more torque to move.  I think the focus motor is the same on the Sony E-mount version, but it just performs better in general on Sony.  I was thoroughly impressed with the lens’ ability to quickly nail focus on birds on the wing, and the fast aperture options makes it easy to get high shutter speeds to freeze that action in place.

The Pro 75E seemed to work very nicely with the a7RV’s AI subject tracking, as I got amazingly well focused results on birds even when there was no visible eye available.

I was a little less successful with a lunging dog in the water because the splashes of water would sometimes confuse focus, but I certainly got some well focused results in my sequences despite that.  Here’s one at F1.2:

As you might imagine, taking photos of slower moving subjects was incredibly easy.  This cat was walking towards me, and I had no problem getting perfect focus on his eyes…and look at that background!

I purposely put some branches in the foreground when taking a “portrait” of this rooster, but as you can see that proved zero problem:

Here’s another from a little further

Depth of field was absolutely tiny when shooting across the table at my subject, but look at how well focused this shot is:

Likewise when further away focus was flawless at F1.2 (as was contrast…and color…and bokeh, but I get ahead of myself…)

This should work very well as a portrait lens (which should be the main reason to purchase one), and focus is now pretty much flawless for that application.  My wife took this shot at F1.2 of me on my birthday, and even with my eyes faced down, focus is flawless.

For stills, the autofocus on the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 is, well, rather pro.

Video AF isn’t quite as good, though obviously improved from what I saw on Fuji.  Focus pulls were fairly good and smooth, but there was sometimes a little “bounce” where focus went a little too far on the initial focus rack and had to come back a fraction to lock.  I found focus transitions in video footage where I moved from one subject to another to be a little better…even at F1.2, where depth of field is very shallow.

My “hand test” where I test the transitions from my face to my hand was better.  There was more confidence with these more definite subjects, and I didn’t see any hunting.  Focus went confidently from my hand to my eyes and vice versa.  The focus pulls were smooth, but there is some obvious focus breathing that makes the transitions a little more jarring.  

In a static shot where focus just needed to stick with the action (like flowers or grasses blowing in the wind), I had perfect results.  I’ve also used the lens a few times for my YouTube video segments, and it tracked my eye perfectly with zero hunting during the extended clips.

I’ve saved one of my most amazing anecdotes until last.  The photo above probably doesn’t blow your mind, right?  But here’s what is amazing about it.  I saw some dragonflies buzzing around and wanted to take a photo of them, but the one that remained immediately flew up into a cedar.  I thought, “Now here is a real test!”.  I set the camera on “Insect Detection”, had the Viltrox at F1.2, and aimed it at the cedar and let the AF find the dragonfly.  Here’s a crop of that image above:

Is that not amazing?  Kudos to both Viltrox and Sony here.  I’m impressed!

Viltrox Pro 75mm F1.2 Image Quality

Viltrox has pulled out all the stops with this lens and has included a number of exotic elements in the optical construction (4 high-refractive elements and 3 Extra-low dispersion elements), leaving an MTF results that looks quite good at F1.2 and great when stopped down to F8 (this is the X-mount MTF chart, but the E-mount looks the same):

The Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 was one of the first lenses that I reviewed on the ultra-high resolution of the new Fuji 40MP APS-C sensors, and frankly it spoiled me a bit.  It gave me the false impression that lenses were going to be able to handle that tremendous pixel density (the equivalent of a full frame 90MP camera!) without issue.  I’ve reviewed 7 or 8 X-mount lenses on either the X-T5 or X-H2 since, and discovered that this is not at all the case.  Most lenses struggle to show good resolution at that high of a pixel count.  So I already knew that the Pro 75E would be exceptional, particularly considering that Sony doesn’t have any APS-C sensors with nearly as high of resolution.  The 26MP that I’m reviewing on here is as high as it gets.  The Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 handles this level of resolution with ease…even shooting landscapes at F1.2: 

A big part of what makes this lens so exceptional is that it provides effortless levels of contrast at any focus distance; it isn’t just “optimized” for a certain distance.  Some lenses practically demand that you shoot them in their “sweet spot” in order to get reasonable performance, but the Pro 75E can handle the infinity distance above as easily as it does extremely close results like this:

I chose the image above as it is a perfect opportunity for some chromatic aberrations.  High contrast edges with a fade towards edges that should be white.  Many previous Viltrox lenses struggled with chromatic aberrations (particularly longitudinal chromatic aberrations), but the Viltrox Pro 75mm showed almost no fringing to be found in either my formal tests or real world results.  Here’s a gull flying against a bright sky, shot at F1.2.  Note the crop and the complete absence of fringing.

Viltrox claims Apochromatic levels of chromatic aberrations, but without suggesting that this is an APO design.  I’m not quite sure how they are accomplishing it, but there’s something special going on here.

I’m also satisfied with the control of LaCA (lateral chromatic aberrations) that typically show up along the edges of the frame with high contrast transition points.  Here we can see that even at F8 there is essentially a perfect transition from black to white near the edge of my test chart.

I also found no fringing in real world images along the edges of the frame – nothing here but sharp, precise transitions in contrast.  You can see from this landscape image and its crop that there is no lateral fringing near the edges of the frame.

For those interested, the move to Sony has allowed us to evaluate how much of the full frame circle that the lens covers as E-mount is shared across both full frame and APS-C cameras.  For those hoping that this secretly a full frame lens, I’m afraid you’ll be disappointed.  Here’s how the full frame image circle looks like:

If I manually crop, I can get very slightly wider than the standard APS-C crop (bottom left), but not much wider:

If we move on to vignette and distortion we find mostly good news.  There is next to no distortion at all (I did no correction) and (in an emerging trend as I test more third party lenses on both Fuji and Sony), I see less vignette than I did on Fuji.  I needed a +55 to correct for the vignette.

In some images I definitely wanted the vignette corrected, but in others I found that a bit of vignette helped draw the eye to the subject and was part of the “look” of an image.

While there appeared to be some vignette correction on Fuji, I don’t think the same is true here.  I looked at JPEGs and the vignette appeared as uncorrected as it was in the RAW files.

Other than the vignette, the Viltrox AF Pro 75mm F1.2 STM has passed our early tests with flying colors.

We’ll move on to inspecting our test chart.  My formal tests were done on the APS-C mode of the Sony a7RV, which results in 26MP of resolution.  I use a high end tripod and two second camera delay to ensure vibration doesn’t affect images.  Here’s a look at the test chart that we will examine at high magnification:

If we take a look at crops (at about 170%) at F1.2 from the center, mid-frame, and lower right corner, we find that center and mid-frame performance is fantastic with the corners only lagging a little behind.

Even a very mild stop down to F1.4 starts to improve vignette and allow for even more contrast in the corners, which now look pretty excellent:

In real world results, detail looks pretty much perfect even at F1.2:

This shot of a rooster at F1.6 shows unbelievably good detail and contrast:

Obviously smaller apertures like F4-F8 will be pretty much perfect across the frame.

But what makes the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 exceedingly rare is that it isn’t just very sharp; it also has lovely rendering.  The bokeh remains quite soft and attractive despite the very high level of detail and contrast.  At closer focus distances the F1.2 aperture and longer focal length has the ability to just completely melt away the background, making for beautiful images:

Move a little further away and more of the background is visible, but you’ve got a very 3D look to your subject that, frankly, looks a little Zeiss-like:

But even at further distances where the background is more obvious, it still melts away in such a way that the subject is allowed to pop:

Perhaps the only thing you could complain about is that the geometry has a fair bit of “cat-eye” look towards the edges of the frame, but it also gives a bit of a “swirl” effect that has been highly prized by a lot of photographers for its artistic look.

I guess the solution to the “cat-eye” bokeh is to just shoot images with “cat bokeh”:

In the past I haven’t found Viltrox color rendition to be top tier, but I think we’ve got an upgrade in the optical glass being used in this Pro series, as color rendition has been very pleasing to me.  

Skin tones also looked nice and natural.  Here’s another birthday shot of me with my birthday/Father’s Day gift – a new Milwaukee battery powered lawnmower (I’ll have a bit of content about it on my channel if you’re interested).

I found flare resistance to be fairly good for a lens with such a large maximum aperture.  In this F1.2 shot you can see that contrast has held up pretty well, that there is no light-induced fringing, and the only negative is a bit of a ghosting blob in the lower middle of the image.

If I just shoot at the midday sun at F11, I got a bit more of a ghosting pattern, but nothing extreme.

All told, the optical performance of the Viltrox Pro 75mm F1.2 is just fantastic. I’ve seen very few lenses designed for APS-C that are competing at this level, and none with this large of a maximum aperture.  Typically with F1.2 lenses you are dealing with a soft, dreamy look at F1.2 that only becomes crisp when stopped down a fair way, but Viltrox has managed to deliver beautiful optics from wide open.  Yes, the lens is big and heavy, but not so overwhelmingly so that it is unusable.  The image quality easily justifies the size, however.  This lens is incredible!  You can check out more photos by visiting the image gallery here.

Conclusion

The Viltrox AF Pro 75mm F1.2 STM is as welcome on Sony E-mount as it was on Fuji X-mount.  I really like this particular focal length, as it gives you more compression to backgrounds than the 56mm does but is short enough to be more flexible than either an 85mm or 90mm lens.  I’ve often wondered why more lens makers don’t make portrait oriented primes in the 100-110mm range, as I think this is a really great spot for portrait work.  There are very few lenses for Sony E-mount in this particular space, and fewer still that are purpose designed for APS-C.  Sony doesn’t make an APS-C prime longer than 50mm, and thus only covers this focal length with zooms that have a MUCH smaller maximum aperture.  There just aren’t any Sony-branded APS-C lenses that can make images like this:

That obviously makes this lens very valuable, and the fact that the autofocus on Sony is good enough to keep up with birds in flight (even at F1.2!) only adds to the value:

And finally, there is that value proposition.  At at price tag of $549 USD, this is a LOT of lens for the money.  It is priced extremely competitively relative to its performance, which, to me, makes this perhaps THE portrait lens of choice for Sony APS-C shooters.  It is also great for street, art prints, landscapes, and general subjects.  It’s pretty much good at everything.  So yes, I wholeheartedly recommend this lens.  I think the Viltrox Pro 75E is simply amazing.

 

Pros:

  • Next level build quality
  • Inclusion of weather sealing 
  • Aperture can be declicked
  • AF/MF switch plus focus hold button
  • STM focus motor provides accurate focus even at F1.2
  • Faster maximum aperture than competing lenses
  • Excellent sharpness at F1.2
  • Excellent control of aberrations
  • Essentially no distortion
  • Very nice bokeh
  • APO-like performance
  • USB port for firmware updates
  • Amazing price to performance ratio

Cons:

  • Vignette a little heavy
  • Some may find the lens large and heavy

 

Gear Used:

Purchase the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 @ B&H Photo  | AdoramaViltrox (use code DUSTINABBOTT for 10% off) | Amazon | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Pergear Store | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a7RV @ B&H Photo | AdoramaAmazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a6700 @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

 

Want to support this channel? Use these affiliate links to shop at: B&H Photo | Amazon | Adorama | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Ebay | Make a donation via Paypal

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Keywords: Viltrox, Viltrox AF, Viltrox 75mm, Viltrox 75mm, F1.2, f/1.2, STM, Viltrox AF 75mm F1.2, Viltrox 75mm Review, Viltrox AF 75mm F1.2 Review, E-mount, Sony, Review, Sony a6700, Sony a6600, Sony a6400, Sony a7RV, Bokeh, Portrait, Dustin Abbott, Tracking, Hands On, Video Test, Sharpness, Autofocus, Build, Real World, Letthelightin, DA, #letthelightin, #DA, #Photography

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 E-Mount Image Gallery

Dustin Abbott

July 28th, 2023

8 months ago I gave a glowing review of the Fuji X-mount version of the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2.   It was a stunningly good lens that managed to deliver next level improvements to the build and optics.  I knew then that a Sony E-mount version of the lens was inevitable, and it has finally arrived.  In what has become typical Viltrox fashion, it’s not the same lens ported over, however, but Viltrox has managed to deliver some key improvements that makes the Sony E-mount version even better than the Fuji version was.  This includes some new features like the ability to declick the aperture, a focus hold button, and their stylish new orange/red weather sealing gasket that they debuted on the amazing Viltrox AF 16mm F1.8 full frame lens (my review here). 

The Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 is the first in their new series of “Pro” lenses, with a rumored 27mm F1.2 soon to follow.  The Pro series has a more upscale build and feature set along with truly premium options.  The Pro 75E is an APS-C lens, so the crop factor of the camera it is mounted on will affect its apparent aperture.   Sony’s E-mount has a crop factor of 1.5 which will make the lens behave something like 115mm on a full frame camera – a very, very intriguing focal length for portrait work, particularly with that extremely wide maximum aperture.  There isn’t really any true competition for this lens on Sony, as dedicated portrait telephoto lenses with fast maximum apertures for APS-C just haven’t existed.  You will love the Pro AF 75mm F1.2; it has the ability to just crush backgrounds.

The only thing that held the Fuji version of the lens back was that the autofocus was only so-so (it has since been improved via firmware), but this new Sony version has the advantages of A) having had that additional development time to perfect the AF and B) the fact that Sony’s autofocus is better than Fuji’s at this point, particularly since my “APS-C” camera on Sony is the APS-C crop mode of the amazing Sony a7RV.  It’s 26MP in APS-C mode matches that of the new Sony a6700 but with the superior ergonomics and autofocus of Sony’s bigger full frame bodies. I was blown away with how much better autofocus was on the new Sony version, particularly with action sequences.  I could easily pick out a bird in flight at F1.2…and look at how amazing the results are! 

Viltrox claims near APO levels of correction for chromatic aberrations, which I’ve definitely verified to be true.  That’s extremely impressive in a lens with this wide of an aperture.  This Pro AF 75mm has a tremendous amount of “bite” even at F1.2, and at its best the lens produces images that look much, much more expensive than the price tag suggests.

It seems absurd to say, but the last few lenses from Viltrox have left me with as much anticipation for their new releases as any brand out there, and part of that is that they continue to deliver incredible value.  The MSRP of the Pro AF 75mm as it comes to market is $549USD (though if you buy it from the Viltrox store and use code DUSTINABBOTT you can get 10% any Viltrox product, including this lens), which makes this lens an absolute bargain relative to the performance.  The Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 in Sony E-mount isn’t quite perfect, but it is as about as close as it gets.   If you want more information, you can watch my definitive video review, read my text review, or just enjoy the photos below.

 

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Thanks to Viltrox for sending me an evaluation copy of the 75mm F1.2.   As always, this is a completely independent review. 

Photos of the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 E-Mount

 

Photos Taken with Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 

 

 

Gear Used:

Purchase the Viltrox Pro AF 75mm F1.2 @ B&H Photo  | AdoramaViltrox (use code DUSTINABBOTT for 10% off) | Amazon | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Pergear Store | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a7RV @ B&H Photo | AdoramaAmazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony a6700 @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Sony Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

 

Want to support this channel? Use these affiliate links to shop at: B&H Photo | Amazon | Adorama | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Ebay | Make a donation via Paypal

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Keywords: Viltrox, Viltrox AF, Viltrox 75mm, Viltrox 75mm, F1.2, f/1.2, STM, Viltrox AF 75mm F1.2, Viltrox 75mm Review, Viltrox AF 75mm F1.2 Review, E-mount, Sony, Review, Sony a6700, Sony a6600, Sony a6400, Sony a7RV, Bokeh, Portrait, Dustin Abbott, Tracking, Hands On, Video Test, Sharpness, Autofocus, Build, Real World, Letthelightin, DA, #letthelightin, #DA, #Photography

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Sigma 23mm F1.4 DC DN Contemporary Review

Dustin Abbott

May 9th, 2023

It has been four years since I last reviewed a premium Sigma DN prime lens designed specifically for APS-C.  The last one that I tested was the Sigma 56mm F1.4 DN, which impressed me as a portrait/short telephoto lens that was extremely sharp (one of the sharpest APS-C lenses that I’ve tested).  Sigma is finally back with a new entry in the line-up, and this one covers the incredibly important full frame equivalent 35mm focal length.  The Sigma 23mm F1.4 DC DN Contemporary is (according to Sigma) the APS-C equivalent of their 35mm F1.4 DN ART lens, though, as we’ll see, Sigma’s design brief for the APS-C series follows a different formula than their full frame lenses.  Here’s a look at the DC (APS-C) DN (mirrorless) lineup thus far.

  1. Sigma 16mm F1.4
  2. Sigma 23mm F1.4
  3. Sigma 30mm F1.4
  4. Sigma 56mm F1.4
  5. Sigma 18-50mm F2.8

Sigma’s DC DN series has become even more important now that Fuji has lifted their restrictions on third party development for the platform, as the Fuji X-mount is a place where these lenses can really thrive – particularly considering that fact that Sigma likes to make high resolving lenses and Fuji currently has the highest resolving APS-C cameras!  I’m doing this review on Sony E-mount, but I would love to see this Sigma 23mm (and other lenses from the series) on a Fujifilm X-H2 and its 40.2MP sensor!  You can also get this lens in a Leica L mount, though there aren’t any L-mount APS-C bodies and you would be using it in APS-C mode on one of the high resolution full frame models.  While I’ve done my formal tests on a Sony a6400 (along with some of the sample photos), I actually enjoy the lens much more on my 50MP Sony Alpha 1 in APS-C mode because I vastly prefer the ergonomics, viewfinder, IBIS, and focus system of that camera.  I’ve recently said that the best APS-C camera that Sony has at the moment is the a7RV in APS-C mode!

The 35mm focal length is one of my favorites, as it works very well as a general purpose walkaround focal length, good for landscapes, cityscapes, street, and people portraits.  This Sigma 23mm F1.4 covers that focal length with aplomb, with plenty of sharpness, nice color, and fairly good bokeh.

The maximum aperture of F1.4 is always attractive, as it gives you low light versatility along with creative depth of field options.  I’ll explore the strengths and weaknesses of the lens in this review.  So now you have a choice:  watch the video review below or read on to get the full picture.

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Thanks to Gentec (Sigma’s Canadian Distributor) for sending me a pre-release review loaner of this lens. As always, this is a completely independent review. *The tests and most of the photos that I share as a part of my review cycle have been done with the Sony a6400 along with the Sony Alpha 1 which will serve as my benchmark camera for the foreseeable future (my review here).

Sigma 23mm F1.4 Build and Handling

While the 23mm F1.4 is much smaller and lighter than the full frame equivalent 35mm F1.4, it isn’t a particularly small lens by APS-C standards.  It is 65.8mm (D) x 78.9mm in length (for Sony E – it is slightly shorter for Leica L and slightly longer for X-mount).  That’s 2.6″ x 3.1″.  The filter size is 52mm, and the lens weighs in at 330g or 11.6oz.  There are a few competitors if we widen the net to include Fuji X-mount, and the Sigma is middle of the pack in terms of size and weight though at the larger end of the spectrum (the Fujinon XF 23mm F1.4 LM is slightly larger and heavier).

The Sigma also falls short of the Fuji lens in price at $549 USD, though it is significantly more expensive than either the Viltrox or Tokina budget alternatives (both available right under $300).

Sigma’s build quality on these lenses is quite nice.  Though they position this lineup under their “Contemporary” branding, the aesthetic and feel of the lens isn’t really different than their ART series. The design language and materials are quite similar…just smaller.

The key difference is that the DC DN primes are essentially featureless.  The only “feature” is the manual focus ring.  There is no aperture ring, no switches…nothing.  That’s definitively a disadvantage compared to all the alternatives, which at the least feature aperture rings.  I’ve seen this happen before; a lens maker locks themselves into a certain standard of features for a series of lenses and then the market shifts and that standard isn’t really high enough to be fully competitive.  That’s going to be key as they shift into the Fuji space, as Fuji lenses are often built to a higher standard of features.

The Sigma 23mm F1.4 has a weather sealing gasket at the lens mount, which isn’t quite as good as having further seals inside the lens itself, but it’s something.

The lens barrel is primarily dominated by a large, nicely made manual focus ring.  Like other lenses designed for mirrorless cameras, this is a focus-by-wire system in which input from the focus ring is routed through the focus motor.  It is actually the focus motor that moves the elements, making manual focus more of an emulation than a direct movement of the elements.  Some lenses pull this off better than others, and the Sigma 23mm F1.4 is one of them.  I will note that the lens will automatically alert the body to magnify the image when you are manually focusing, which is a big help in visually confirming focus.  

The 56mm DC can focus down to 9.8″ (25cm), where it provides a 0.136x magnification figure.  That’s not particularly high for a 35mm focal length, and the Fujifilm 23mm can focus closer (19cm) and has a significantly higher 0.20x magnification, though this is an area where both the Tokina and Viltrox come up short with just a 0.10x magnification level.  Here’s what MFD for the Sigma looks like.

The magnification figure isn’t exceptionally good, but up close performance is looks pretty decent (though with some reduced contrast), and for some reason I felt like I could a little closer and get a little higher magnification than what the figure on paper suggests.  It’s definitely enough to be useful.

The lens hood is included, and Sigma’s lens hoods are a cut above the basic hoods included with many lenses.  They include some soft-touch materials, texture variations, and lens information.

The aperture iris is electromagnetic and controlled from within the camera (no aperture ring).  It has nine rounded aperture blades that do a fairly good job of retaining a circular shape even with the lens stopped down.  At F2 we have circular specular highlight all across the frame, and the geometry is pretty good even wide open.  At F2.8 I can see a hint of the aperture blade shape, but everything is still roughly circular.  Here’s a series at F1.4, F2, and F2.8.

All in all this is a beautifully made little lens.  I did miss having both an aperture ring and an AF/MF switch, and wouldn’t mind seeing Sigma shake up the formula moving ahead to be more directly competitive on the Fuji space.  Viltrox is including at least an aperture ring even on Sony E mount, and their recent Pro AF 75mm F1.2 (currently just out for Fuji X, but expected for Sony E) has more thorough weather sealing, an aperture ring, and an AF/MF switch for about the same money as this Sigma lens.  The standard in the class is changing, and I would like to see Sigma adapt in the same fashion they have with their full frame offerings.

Sigma 23mm F1.4 DN Autofocus

Sigma continues to utilize a stepping focus motor (STM) in these smaller lenses as the elements are smaller and lighter than lenses with an F1.4 aperture designed for full frame.  For the most part the STM focus motor gets the job done here, though there was an area that left me wanting a little bit.  In most situations, however, focus was fast, quiet, and accurate.

Eye AF seemed to work fine whether I was photographing a human or animal subject:

As per usual, I enjoyed autofocus more when using the lens in APS-C mode on my Alpha 1 than on the a6400, but that’s more a reflection of the fact that the Alpha 1 just has a better, well, everything.  For my “walkabouts” in the woods focus was fast and accurate on various subjects that caught my eye…allowing the optics to really shine.

During my focus pull test I heard no focus noise despite working in a near silent environment.  Focus pulls were smooth and quick without pulsing or settling.  There is a moderate amount of focus breathing that takes place during focus pulls.

The area where I was less than impressed was during my “hand test”.  I ran it multiple times, and the second time I was deliberately very slow with my transitions of either putting my hand up or removing it, but I still found focus changes very sluggish (this was on the a6400).  I didn’t have a successful transition where focus had fully pulled to my hand before I removed it…even when I was deliberately moving much slower than usual.  I’m not quite sure what to blame that on.  

Focus worked fine for gimbal footage and for video tracking in general; just don’t expect rapid focus transitions in some situations.  My assistant, Craig, noted in his review that the Sigma did a great job staying properly focused on the subject as both the subject and the camera moved around.

But I had good results for general photography.  

In short, the focus system is excellent, and I have no really concerns to report.

Sigma 23mm F1.4 Image Quality Breakdown

Sigma’s lineup of F1.4 DC DN lenses have all been very strong optically, and the 23mm F1.4 is no exception.  It essentially becomes the second sharpest lens in the lineup, falling only behind the 56mm F1.4 in absolute performance.  Here’s a look at the MTF charts for each of the lenses along with the 35mm F1.4 ART for comparison.

This suggests a very strong performance across about 2/3rds of the frame before a drop in the corners.  This should be a sharper lens than the full frame 35mm F1.4…and images are definitely VERY sharp.

Let’s take at some of the technical aspects of performance.  Sigma lenses enjoy good profile corrections on either Sony, Fuji, or Leica platforms, but we’ll look past the corrections to the optics of the lens itself.  Here’s a look at my vignette and distortion chart, with the uncorrected result on the left and a manually corrected result on the right.

There’s a moderate amount of barrel distortion (I corrected with a +9), but it is nice and linear, so I was able to correct it without any mustache type pattern left behind.  Vignette is roughly 2 stops in the corner, and again it corrected in a linear fashion, so no concerns there.  I actually felt like the Sigma RAW profile for Lightroom slightly overcorrected the distortion and created a bit of pincushion distortion.

It isn’t unusual for a wide aperture prime lens like this one to suffer from some longitudinal chromatic aberrations (LoCA), and that’s true here.  I noticed most strongly during video work where some fringing was apparent in bright areas.  It is most prominent near the window frames, though I also see some purple fringing in some other zones.  Here’s a screen shot to depict what I see: 

I didn’t see much LoCA in my stills photos, however, and a pull across the black and white lines on my test chart didn’t show a lot of fringing either.  I would say that you’ll just have to watch out for certain scenarios that trigger it, and, if you do see it, stopping down to F2 or F2.8 will resolve that.

I saw little evidence of lateral chromatic aberrations (LaCA) along the edge of the frame in either my chart tests or any real world images (all of these bare branches are prime breeding grounds for LaCA:

Nothing too concerning here.  We’ll move on to testing sharpness.  The sharpness tests are done on the Sony a6400, which has 24MP of resolution.   Here’s a look at the test chart we’re using for the tests.

If we look closely wide open at F1.4 (crops are at roughly 200%), we find that the lens produces extremely strong resolution results across most of the frame.  Yes, you can see that the extreme corners are softer, but they are still not bad.

Here’s an F1.4 shot from a golf course that looks great at a global level but holds up even when viewed at a pixel level.

Closer shots show great sharpness and contrast even at high magnification levels.

This is actually a lens I would be interested in revisiting on a high resolution Fuji body like the X-H2 when Sigma releases it on X-mount (summer 2023), as I would love to see how it handles the extreme resolution there.

The Sigma 23mm F1.4 also showed very good centering, with consistent sharpness everywhere I looked.  

Stopping down to F1.8 produced slightly higher level of contrast – not significant, but enough to be noticeable.  By F2 there is a definitive improvement in the corners.

By F2.8 we have reached very near peak sharpness, with only the tiniest corner improvement by F5.6.  This F4 image shows great detail and contrast across the frame.

After F5.6 there is a mild softening effect as diffraction starts to set in.  By F16 (minimum aperture) diffraction has really softened the image even on the 24MP resolution sensor.  Expect the effect to be worse still on a very high resolution Fuji body.

We’ve established that this is a very sharp lens, but what softness where it is wanted (aka bokeh)?  I noted this as a weakness of the 56mm F1.4, as while it could compete with and even best most full frame 85mm lenses in terms of sharpness, the bokeh wasn’t as soft and creamy as many of them.  I would say the same is true here, as while the bokeh is reasonably nice, I do see quite a bit of outlining in out of focus areas that should be nice and soft.  Take a look at this image of an interesting fallen tree.  The sharpness of the place where the branch once was is fantastic, but you can see a lot of outlining in the bed of fallen leaves in the background where it should be just soft and creamy.

Likewise this shot of a lock shows some busyness in the background beyond it, too.

For some perspective, here’s a shot that I took to match the Sigma though under less ideal conditions (rainy and dark).  I framed the two shots in a similar fashion.  I used an F1.8 lens on full frame rather than a F1.4 lens due to the difference in depth of field between the two sensors.  The Samyang image on the right presents with softer bokeh and less outlining in the background.

This is not to say that the Sigma bokeh is bad (it’s not), but just to illustrate the point that in the balance between sharp and soft, the Sigma slightly tilts towards sharpness…in my opinion.  Bokeh is subjective, however, so I’ll share a few more “bokeh shots” here to allow you to form your own opinion.

Color rendition is nice, with good color saturation but without a skewing towards garish:

Here’s another nice shot from the lens.

I was also impressed with flare resistance.  I shot into the sun pretty much with impunity.  There was little loss of contrast and no big ghosting blobs to ruin the image, and as a bonus, the sunstars look pretty good, too.

There are essentially no better lenses optically at this focal length that I’ve seen thus far.  The Sigma 23mm F1.4 provides images that are going to delight with their detail, and with the move to higher resolution APS-C cameras in this generation, having such high performance is going to be even more important.  You can check out even more photos by visiting the lens image gallery here.  

Conclusion

It’s always nice to see new development for APS-C, and it has been several years since we’ve seen a new APS-C specific prime lens from Sigma.  Their recent move to start developing for Fuji X-mount may help spur more development, as the more platforms that each lens can be sold for helps Sigma get a better return for their investment.  Between Sony E, Leica L, and Fuji X mounts there should be plenty of potential buyers for the Sigma 23mm F1.4 DC DN | Contemporary lens.  The fact that this lens covers an important focal length so well surely won’t hurt, either.  Only Fuji has a more feature rich option at the 23mm focal length, and it retails for $350 more than the Sigma.

The Sigma delivers on most fronts with great optics, a nice build, reasonable size and weight, and quick autofocus.  When I reviewed the 56mm a few years back the standard in the industry was for APS-C lenses to be bare bones, so even the fact that there was a weather sealing gasket was a bonus.  That standard has changed, however, and it feels like a $550 lens like this should come with a few more features in 2023.

My list of complaints about this lens is pretty brief.  There’s a lot of things that the Sigma 23mm F1.4 does well, and I’d be hard pressed to point to a better 35mm equivalent lens for APS-C.  There’s going to a be a lot of photographers who love this lens for its amazing sharpness, compact size, and large maximum aperture.  It’s a great compliment to other standouts in the series, and I suspect it will be welcomed in the Fuji, Sony, and Leica platforms by future owners.

 

Pros:

  • Beautifully built lens with some weather sealing
  • Compact and lightweight
  • Large, bright maximum aperture.
  • Exceptional sharpness across the frame
  • Very high contrast
  • Good color rendition
  • Excellent flare resistance
  • Fast, silent autofocus
  • Excellent focus accuracy (including with Eye AF)

Cons:

  • No aperture ring or AF/MF switch
  • The bokeh is a little busy

 

Purchase the Sigma 23mm F1.4 DN @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sigma DN 56mm F1.4 C @ B&H Photo | Amazon | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

Purchase the Sony a7IV @ B&H Photo | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony Alpha 1 @ Camera Canada | B&H Photo | Amazon | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

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Purchasing your gear through B&H and these links helps fund this website and keeps the articles coming. You can also make a donation here if you would like.  Visit my Amazon page for some of my gear of choice! Thank you for your support.

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Keywords: Sigma 23mm F1.4 DN, Sigma 23mm, Sigma 23mm, Sigma 23mm review, Sigma 23mm F1.4 DC DN, DC, DN, Contemporary, 23mm, F1.4, f/1.4, Review, Fuji X, Sony E, Review, Telephoto, Action, Tracking, Hands On, Dustin Abbott, Real World, Comparison, Sharpness, Bokeh, Flare Resistance, Autofocus, Image Quality, Sample Images, Video, Photography, Sony a6400, Sony a6600, Fujifilm X-T5, Fujifilm X-H2, let the light in, #letthelightin, DA, #SIGMA, #SIGMA23mmContemporary, #SIGMAContemporary, #SIGMAContemporaryPrime, #SIGMADCDN

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.

Sigma 23mm F1.4 DC DN Image Gallery

Dustin Abbott

May 8th, 2023

It has been four years since I last reviewed a premium Sigma DN prime lens designed specifically for APS-C.  The last one that I tested was the Sigma 56mm F1.4 DN, which impressed me as a portrait/short telephoto lens that was extremely sharp (one of the sharpest APS-C lenses that I’ve tested).  Sigma is finally back with a new entry in the line-up, and this one covers the incredibly important full frame equivalent 35mm focal length.  The Sigma 23mm F1.4 DC DN Contemporary is (according to Sigma) the APS-C equivalent of their 35mm F1.4 DN ART lens, though, as we’ll see, Sigma’s design brief for the APS-C series follows a different formula than their full frame lenses.  Here’s a look at the DC (APS-C) DN (mirrorless) lineup thus far.

  1. Sigma 16mm F1.4
  2. Sigma 23mm F1.4
  3. Sigma 30mm F1.4
  4. Sigma 56mm F1.4
  5. Sigma 18-50mm F2.8

Sigma’s DC DN series has become even more important now that Fuji has lifted their restrictions on third party development for the platform, as the Fuji X-mount is a place where these lenses can really thrive – particularly considering that fact that Sigma likes to make high resolving lenses and Fuji currently has the highest resolving APS-C cameras!  I’m doing this review on Sony E-mount, but I would love to see this Sigma 23mm (and other lenses from the series) on a Fujifilm X-H2 and its 40.2MP sensor!  You can also get this lens in a Leica L mount, though there aren’t any L-mount APS-C bodies and you would be using it in APS-C mode on one of the high resolution full frame models.  While I’ve done my formal tests on a Sony a6400 (along with some of the sample photos), I actually enjoy the lens much more on my 50MP Sony Alpha 1 in APS-C mode because I vastly prefer the ergonomics, viewfinder, IBIS, and focus system of that camera.  I’ve recently said that the best APS-C camera that Sony has at the moment is the a7RV in APS-C mode!

The 35mm focal length is one of my favorites, as it works very well as a general purpose walkaround focal length, good for landscapes, cityscapes, street, and people portraits.  This Sigma 23mm F1.4 covers that focal length with aplomb, with plenty of sharpness, nice color, and fairly good bokeh.

The maximum aperture of F1.4 is always attractive, as it gives you low light versatility along with creative depth of field options.  I’ll explore the strengths and weaknesses of the lens in this review.  So now you have a choice:  watch the video review below or read on to get the full picture.

 

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Thanks to Gentec (Sigma’s Canadian Distributor) for sending me a pre-release review loaner of this lens. As always, this is a completely independent review. *The tests and most of the photos that I share as a part of my review cycle have been done with the Sony a6400 along with the Sony Alpha 1 which will serve as my benchmark camera for the foreseeable future (my review here).

Photos of the Sigma 23mm F1.4 DC DN

 

Sigma 23mm F1.4 Image Quality Breakdown

 

Purchase the Sigma 23mm F1.4 DN @ B&H Photo | Adorama | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sigma DN 56mm F1.4 C @ B&H Photo | Amazon | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

Purchase the Sony a7IV @ B&H Photo | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany 

Purchase the Sony Alpha 1 @ Camera Canada | B&H Photo | Amazon | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

Purchase a Sony a9M2 @ B&H Photo | Amazon | Camera Canada | Amazon Canada | Amazon UK | Amazon Germany | Ebay 

Want to support this channel? Use these affiliate links to shop at: B&H Photo | Amazon | | Camera Canada | Ebay | Make a donation via Paypal

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Adobe Photoshop Creative Cloud 1-Year Subscription
Get a discount off all Skylum Editing Software (Luminar, Aurora HDR, AirMagic) by using code DUSTINHDR at checkout:
Visit Dustin’s Amazon Storefront and see his favorite gear

Purchasing your gear through B&H and these links helps fund this website and keeps the articles coming. You can also make a donation here if you would like.  Visit my Amazon page for some of my gear of choice! Thank you for your support.

Purchasing your gear through B&H and these links helps fund this website and keeps the articles coming. You can also make a donation here if you would like.  Visit my Amazon page for some of my gear of choice! Thank you for your support.

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Receive a 5% discount on all purchases at Amplis Foto, Canada’s Leading Photographic Supplier. Please enter discount code: AMPLIS52018DA in your cart. It is good for everything in your cart, and is stackable with other coupons, too! It will take 5% off your entire order! Proceeds go towards keeping this site going and providing you with new reviews!

Use Code “DUSTINHDR” to get $10 off ($15 CDN) any Skylum product:  Luminar, Aurora, or AirMagic

 


 

Keywords: Sigma 23mm F1.4 DN, Sigma 23mm, Sigma 23mm, Sigma 23mm review, Sigma 23mm F1.4 DC DN, DC, DN, Contemporary, 23mm, F1.4, f/1.4, Review, Fuji X, Sony E, Review, Telephoto, Action, Tracking, Hands On, Dustin Abbott, Real World, Comparison, Sharpness, Bokeh, Flare Resistance, Autofocus, Image Quality, Sample Images, Video, Photography, Sony a6400, Sony a6600, Fujifilm X-T5, Fujifilm X-H2, let the light in, #letthelightin, DA, #SIGMA, #SIGMA23mmContemporary, #SIGMAContemporary, #SIGMAContemporaryPrime, #SIGMADCDN

DISCLAIMER: This article and description contains affiliate links, which means that if you click on one of the product links, I’ll receive a small commission. As an Amazon Associate I earn from qualifying purchases.