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Sony 90mm macro g
Sony 90mm macro g













  1. SONY 90MM MACRO G MANUAL
  2. SONY 90MM MACRO G PLUS

And it also performs remarkably well for all other forms of photography that I tried with it, short of sports/birding. Wide open it loses just a bit of ultimate sharpness, which is not a problem for portrait, some even prefer it that way. The lowish micro-contrast means it does not unkindly underline facial features the way a stronger micro-contrast would (read: Zeiss Batis). It has gorgeous colours, a very creamy bokeh, and rapid transition from in-focus to out-of-focus. It is a phenomenal lens, and it is optimized for portraits, including wide open. DXO has just given it a fantastic review, saying it has Otus level image quality.įor portraits, the 85 GM is the best of the 3. If you do mostly portraits, I'd consider saving up for the 85 1.4 GM lens. For a more general purpose lens with an emphasis on portraits, I'd pick the Batis (which is a fantastic landscape lens as well). If you do a lot of macro work I think this should guide you to your answer. So if the choice is between the Sony 90 2.8 and Canon 100 2.8 L macros, the Sony is the clear winner in my book.īut the Batis 85 1.8 is very sharp also, also with nice bokeh (which of course can be very subjective some might like the bokeh of the Batis better than the 90 macro, and others vice versa).īoth the 90 macro and the Batis 85 are very, very good lenses and each has its place. The 90 2.8 is the sharpest sharper than the Canon 100 2.8 (but at the same time not as "clinical" rendering as the Canon), with nice bokeh to boot. I have no test result images to offer, but based on taking a lot of real world images with all three lenses here is my experience: I own both the 90 2.8 macro and the Batis 85 1.8. If I cropped both images to the post box only would they be equally sharp? ok resolution sizes would be different as would native print sizes but just for visual sharpness what would happen?

SONY 90MM MACRO G PLUS

Hope this helps.įiveform, since you have or had both can I ask you was the 90 visibly sharper ( I presume) compared to the 70-200 at 90mm? I am wondering, and I am only talking about centre sharpness, if a similar crop of a object out of a 90mm image and a 70-200 image would compare for sharpness detail? for example if across a street and at 200mm f4 I took a image of a post box plus what ever else fitted in the image and the the same postbox with the 90mm at f4 Sorry, but I can't compare with Canon or other lenses which I haven't owned. The 90 is way sharper than the 70-200 which is listed near the top at DxOMark. This all works for me, but I do miss the FE 90 and may pick one up in the future for macro work. I'm not unhappy, as I have a more flexible lens (albeit slower) that can handle portraiture, sports, landscapes and theater (yes, easily at 800 ISO) and I'm no limited to a single focal length. Having said that, when an opportunity came up to acquire the FE 70-200 f/4 I swapped with someone on FM forums. I captured a lot of macros and did also use it in my studio with electronic flash for dazzlingly sharp portraits. Everything’s wrapped up in a robust, weather-resistant casing and high-tech Nano AR Coating is applied to minimize ghosting and flare.I can offer that I had owned the FE 90 Macro f/2.8 and really did love everything about it. Optical finery includes an aspherical lens element, an ED (Extra-low Dispersion) element and a Super ED element. This avoids the risk of the front of the lens casting a shadow over the subject in macro photography. Focusing is fully internal, so the physical length of the lens doesn’t extend at short focus distance. There’s also a customizable AF hold button and switches for optical stabilization on/off and autofocus range limiting, with which you can lock out either the short or the long end of the total travel.

SONY 90MM MACRO G MANUAL

Switching between auto and manual focusing, the latter often being preferred in macro shooting, you just need to snap the control ring backwards or forwards - a trick often used in Tokina lenses amongst others. Autofocus is driven by a DDSSM (Direct Drive Super Sonic wave Motor) that’s quick, quiet and highly accurate even for extreme close-ups. This Sony macro lens has a pretty impressive feature list.

  • Sony FE 90mm f/2.8 Macro G OSS (Black) at Amazon for $998.
  • sony 90mm macro g

    Lens construction: 15 elements in 11 groups















    Sony 90mm macro g