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Digital Camera World
Digital Camera World
Matthew Richards

12 lenses of Christmas: Sony turns up the summer heat in July with a revitalized favorite

Sony FE 70-200mm F4 Macro G OSS II.

Sony hit 50 and counting with the freshly announced Sony FE 70-200mm F4 Macro G II. Indeed, the manufacture of 50 different E-mount, own-brand Sony lenses leaves the likes of Canon and Nikon with a lot of catching up to do. The new lens is hotter than July, boasting improved performance a new 0.5x macro capability.

A hugely popular professional lens, the original Sony FE 70-200mm F4 G has now been replaced by the Mark II. Its new 0.5x macro capability can be boosted to full 1.0x macro with the addition of a 2x teleconverter. (Image credit: Matthew Richards)

Did we mention that Sony left Nikon with some catching up to do in the lens race for mirrorless cameras? We’d say that Tamron had stepped in to help with the launch of its new Tamron 35-150mm f/2-2.8 Di III VXD, especially as the aperture rating makes it ‘faster’ than any own-brand Nikon Z glass. The only trouble is it’s not that much of a help when Tamron had already launched the lens in E-mount for Sony cameras, earlier in the year.

The Tamron 35-150mm f/2-2.8 Di III VXD is the company’s second Z-mount offering for Nikon Z-system cameras. (Image credit: Tamron)

And what summer madness is this? We also brought news in July of a new Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x NA0.5 Supermicro APO. It’s definitely not a bird or a plane but, with as much as a 50x magnification factor, it’s hard to decide if it’s a macro lens of a microscope.

As well as reviewing the new Sony FE 70-200mm F4 Macro G II, we also tested the very appealing Sony FE 50mm F2.8 Macro. Naturally, this lens is a lot smaller, lighter and inexpensive but it gives a full 1.0x macro magnification as well as doubling up as a useful standard prime. With a more wide-angle view, equating to 36mm in full-frame terms, we were also impressed by the new Nikon Z DX 24mm f/1.7 for APS-C format Z-system cameras. Again, it’s compact, lightweight and highly effective.

The Nikon Z DX 24mm f/1.7 is small, light and reasonably priced. However, it’s not weather-sealed and has no optical stabilization, which can be an issue given the lack of IBIS in Nikon’s DX format Z-system cameras. (Image credit: Nikon)

Continuing with Nikon Z-mount lenses, we reviewed the Voigtländer 15mm f/4.5 Super Wide-Heliar Z Aspherical and DX format Voigtländer D23mm f/1.2 Nokton. The 15mm is an ultra-wide-angle prime for full-frame cameras, the 23mm is for DX format cameras and gives an effective 35mm focal length in full-frame terms. Both are manual-focus lenses.

The Voigtländer D23mm f/1.2 Nokton looks and feels a great fit for the retro Z fc, and works well for traditional street photography. (Image credit: Matthew Richards)

We finished off July’s review schedule with the AstrHori 18mm f/8 2x Periscope Probe Macro. A remarkable lens, it comes as a kit of parts with its own LED lighting array, enabling you to literally take extreme macro shots where in tucked away places where the sun don’t shine.

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