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Box and contents |
The Sony A580 and A900 were used for this review. For a better understanding of terms and methods used in this review, go here. The usual center, mid-section and corner crops are located at the very bottom
of the page.
Introduction. The
relatively inexpensive Rokinon 35mm F/1.4 UMC aspherical lens was introduced in 2010, and is available for most major camera
mounts, including Sony alpha. It may also be found labeled walimex, Falcon, Opteka, Pro Optic, Vivitar, Bowers and
Samyang. I'm told Samyang of South Korea is the original manufacturer. The lens says "made in Korea."
Found on the outside of the lens is a plastic aperture ring and plastic manual focusing ring,
no focus hold or limiter buttons. Build materials of the body seems to be a mix of metal and plastic. Build quality
is generally good, with a good fit and finish. Additionally, the plastic filter ring at the front that surrounds the
front element is thin, and bends easily with finger pressure. Make sure you don't strip the threads when mounting a
filter. The lens body has an appealing black spatter paint finish. Rokinon claims the use of one aspherical, and
two "high refractive" elements in the design of the lens.
Use. Make
sure you select "enable" for "release W/O lens" on your camera,
otherwise, the camera thinks no lens has been mounted, and won't release
the shutter. This is a manual lens only, meaning there is no communication with the camera (on a Sony
model), you must use manual focus, and choose an aperture. Exposure metering is ok, but you'll need to check your LCD
after each shot and adjust for best results. Also, white balance metering may change as you stop down the aperture;
I've noticed it's warmer at larger apertures, from F/1.4-2.8, and cools off at F/5.6 and smaller, so check you LCD if you're
shooting in Jpegs; with Raw it's no big deal. The aperture settings are marked in one stop increments between F/1.4-2,
and F/16-22, everything in between is in half stops. It is possible to use an in-between aperture, you'll have to carefully
turn the ring and set it between marked stops, although I don't know why you'd want to do that. The viewfinder is very
dark when the aperture is set smaller than F/5.6. Don't set the lens down on the mount side without
a cap when the focus is set to infinity, if you do the rear element will touch the surface and the lens will wobble around
and fall over.
Note; bright daytime use at F/1.4 will often result in having to use
a shutter speed of 1/8000 at ISO 100. Most consumer grade cameras don't have that
shutter speed, (the pro bodied Sony A700/A850/A900 do) so you'll need to use a neutral density filter to bring down the light value and get the proper exposure. The aperture blades form a nice
circle between F/1.4-2, however, from F/4-22 the hole increasingly becomes octagonal.
EXIF
data reads 0mm for focal length, and F/1 for aperture. The live view screen will read F-- with no aperture.
In the box is the lens, front and rear caps, plastic petal type hood, a stinky black fake velvet carrying pouch
and owner's manual. Focusing. Manual focusing only. The focusing ring is damped perfectly
in my opinion, and is pretty easy to turn with one finger. Focus ring travel is over 1/3 of a turn form close-up to
infinity, which is a good amount of travel, but precise focusing (at less than infinity distances) at F/1.4-2 requires practice
(and luck) as you can't see the difference in the viewfinder, even with an "M" focusing screen. My copy delivered
proper focus when set at the infinity hard stop mark.
Requisite product shots.

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Side shot |

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Back side, no contacts |

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Flimsy plastic filter threads |

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Samyang X-ray view |
General information and specifications.
Lens
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Box contents
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Front cap, rear cap, hood, carrying bag and users manual.
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Cost
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Build quality
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Ok to good.
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Additional information
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Introduced in late 2010. May also be marketed under the names; Falcon, Bowers, Samyang, Opteka, Pro Optic, Walimex,
Vivitar.
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Specifications below
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Optical configuration
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12 elements in 10 groups
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Angle of view
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63.2˚ full frame, 43.3˚ APS-C=1.5x
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Aperture
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8 blades, slightly curved
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Full frame and APS-C
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Made for full frame, but works fine on APS-C cameras, with equivalent coverage of about 52mm.
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Depth of field and focus scales?
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Yes, DOF, aperture index marks and focus distance scale.
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Minimum focus, image plane to subject
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About 12" (305mm)
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Minimum focus, end of lens barrel to subject
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About 7.25" (184mm)
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Hard stop at infinity focus?
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Yes, and my copy focuses properly at the hard stop.
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Length changes when focusing?
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No.
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Focus ring turns in AF?
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N/A
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Filter size
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77mm.
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Filter ring rotates?
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No
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Distance encoder?
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No
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Max magnification
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About 0.20x or 1:5
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Min. F/stop
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F/22
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Sony teleconverter compatible?
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No
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Length changes when zooming?
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N/A
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Dimensions WxL (my measurements)
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3.27" x 4.37" 83mm x 111mm.
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Maximum extended length (my measurements)
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4.37" (111mm)
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Weight bare (my scale)
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23.5oz (667g) bare.
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Optical qualities summary. Lens
flare/ghosting. About average control. At large apertures I see some multi-colored rings that may ruin
the image, but stopping down results in mostly isolated colored blobs when the sun is close to, or inside the shot, see examples
below. Light fall-off. large amounts on full frame at F/1.4, but brightens
up at F/2. See samples below.
Color fringing (CA). Lateral color fringing
control is way above average. I see just a tiny bit of magenta and green at the edges of the image. You see minor
amounts of axial color fringing, but it clears up by F/4.
Bokeh. harsh at F/1.4, but smooths out when stopped down, see examples below. Color.
seems slightly warmer (more yellow/orange) than Sony lenses.
Close up filter.
N/A Coma. None.
Regular
filters cause no additional light fall-off on APS-C or full frame cameras. Filter
size. 77mm. Sony uses this size on the CZ 24-70mm F/2.8, 70-200mm F/2.8 G, CZ 135mm F/1.8, 11-18mm F/4.5-5.6,
and the 70-400mm G.
Distortion. mild to moderate barrel distortion.
Distortion example directly below.

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Minor barrel distortion |
Distortion is not a problem with this lens. Bokeh
samples.
Bokeh looks a little harsh at F/1.4, but does smooth out nicely at F/2. The octagonal aperture shape shows up when stopped
down past F/4.
Light fall-off samples.
Light fall-off is somewhat heavy at F/1.4, but improves greatly at F/2.
Let's check out the macro capabilities of this lens.
Below, check out the cropped image (322kb) of the stamp. The sample shot was
taken with the Sony A 580 16.2MP camera. The subject
is a standard US stamp, 0.87"x 1.0" or 22mm x 25mm. Also, note the macro shot was taken as close to the
subject as focusing allowed; in this case a short 7.5" (184mm), measured from the front of the lens barrel to the
subject. This lens has an approximate reproduction size of 0.20x (1:5) which is about average for today's wide
angle prime lenses. The stamp shot looks ok, but lacks contrast, (actually it sucks). There was little difference
between F/4-8. As a side note; the "1996" on the bottom left of the stamp measures a mere 1mm wide.

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As close as you can get, F/5.6. |
_______________________________________________________________________
Full frame results using the Sony A900 below. Check out the differences when using
a film or full frame camera below. I'm only pointing out the noticeable issues as compared to the APS-C bodies, so if
I don't show it here, the results are not significantly different enough to warrant posting an additional set of images in
this section. Light fall-off
I see heavy light fall-off at F/1.4. However, by closing
the aperture just one stop, the frame lightens up tremendously. There's enough light fall-off at F/1.4 to possibly mess
up your auto-exposure system, make sure you don't over expose the middle area.
Full image below
illustrating light fall-off from A900.

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F/1.4, ISO 100, 1/3200sec. |
Here's a full scene that shows actual-use light fall-off with
the lens wide open. Dark corners are not really noticeable, but be careful when using F/1.4, make sure the centers are not
over-exposed, as they are slightly in this shot! Data for the image is; F/1.4, 3200sec, ISO 100. Flare and Ghosting.
Ghosting with lower left corner arc and multi colored blob, F/5.6.
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Small rainbow, F/5.6.
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When the sun is in the image, there are multi-colored (or rainbow) blobs visible, but severity depends
on angle and aperture. At F/1.4-2, you'll see some large rings opposite the sun. When the sun is out of the image
there are still minor ghosting problems, so use your hand as a light block, which works better than the included hood. Full frame distortion.

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Moderate barrel distortion on A900 |
Full frame coverage shows moderate barrel distortion, with
a simple signature, and can be mostly corrected with distortion repair sliders. Real-world close focus shot.

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Detail from center of image. |
This close focus shot at F/1.4 looks good, and doesn't show
a lack of contrast like the stamp shot does. I see a smooth, de-focused background, but this isn't bokeh, it's just out of focus, along with a wide aperture.
Coma samples.
This lens produces no coma! I find this very surprising as even the newest lenses from Sony of this
type have much more than you see here. Coma takes the form of weird, smeared blobs at points of light in the corners
of the image, especially in wide angle lenses. The Christmas tree lights here show
nothing of any consequence, although I do notice the corners are very sharp at F/1.4! 100% crops from the far corners.
Exposure differences are from light fall-off.
Conclusion. The
Rokinon 35mm F/1.4 was unveiled in 2010 with much fanfare, and as of mid 2011, is available for the Sony "α"
mount. Optically speaking, the Rokinon 35mm F/1.4 is excellent, with
very high sharpness at almost all apertures, low distortion, minimal light fall-off
at F/2, and no coma, even in the far corners at F/1.4! Probably the biggest drawback for most
people is the fact that it's a manual only lens, meaning there is no communication between the lens and camera (Sony
models), so if you aren't familiar with using full manual controls, you might want to skip this lens until
your skills improve. The Rokinon 35mm F/1.4 is best used on a full frame camera,
therefore, I can't recommend it for APS-C models. Why? The Sony DT 35mm F/1.8 SAM is sharper in the centers at all apertures, and stopped down a little will match the mid-sections and corners of the
Rokinon. Additionally, the Sony is very small and light-weight,
with full auto focusing and metering, and costs less than half of the
Rokinon. I've been bragging up the Sony 35/1.8 SAM since it was introduced, and you can see
why by checking out the comp at the bottom of the review! I didn't have the Sony 35/1.4 G on hand for this review, but I'm pretty sure the Rokinon is much sharper all around at F/1.4-2.
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