<|-- removed generator --> The Online Photographer: My Favorite Normal Lenses OF ALL TIME

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Wednesday, 05 March 2025

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My Nikon-centric favorite normals are the 50 1.8 Z lens and the Voigtlander 50 f/2 APO. I also like the Voigtlander 40 f/1.2…all three are spectacular performers; expensive, but not crazy-expensive; and are reasonable sizes. Far, far better than anything I had in 2015 or earlier based on corner performance and various flavors of chromatic abberation..

Honorable mention to the 24-70 2.8 S zoom at normal focal lengths or any focal length. It’s a beast.

Regarding the Panasonic 20mm, it's odd to say "although its contrast-detect autofocus is on the slow side" because contrast-detect autofocus is a function of the body, not the lens. Put it on an Olympus body with phase-detect autofocus, and it will focus it using phase-detect. I'm not sure about current Panasonic bodies with phase-detect, as the older ones did odd things with that lens, like not letting you use continuous autofocus at all, because it is indeed slow to focus.

The reason it's slow to focus is that it uses unit-focusing, moving all the elements together, rather than internal-focusing that moves only one or a few elements inside, which are much lighter and therefore easier to move quickly. So, a more-accurate sentence could be "although its unit-focusing autofocus is on the slow side."

I initially thought this was superfluous at best. I was going to suggest voting on the "best pizza" next (trick question in NJ - "next one").
However, as I have been thinking more often with food - what do you remember? What impressed you? What do you miss? This may be the best way to rate anything.
Yes, this is only subjective, but what does "best" mean anyway? No one cares what I think but me... but it's my money.

What no love for the Kern Macro Switar 50mm f 1.9 in Alpa mt. I use it on my M film cameras and my Sony mirrorless A7s and my A9 and also my Sigma fp.

I have many of the lenses that you have on your list, but haven't shot film in 15 years, so I'll mention my current digital favorite standard lenses.

For my current photography: The XF 35mm f/1.4 on my Fujis. I have the maybe "better on paper" f/2 model, with faster focus and weather resistance, but the f/1.4 at the first couple of stops has an unquantifiable "look" that I can see, at least I tell myself that I can. I also use the terrific Voightlander 27mm f/2 for compactness when I'm going light. It has a focus tab and is chipped for Fujifilm so I can retain all manual focus aids and full data.

For my Nikon DSLR, two Voightlander manual focus lenses, both with Nikkor cosmetics and chipped for my camera to give the files full data: the 40mm f/2 and the 58mm f/1.4. The 40mm is my most used lens on this system.

I gave up the search for a nice and affordable version of the #1 on your list when I discovered that it wouldn't play well with a Sony body. I've been content with your #8, the little Sigma 45, which I bracket with the Voigtlander 35 and 50mm APO-Lanthars. The latter would be in first place on my necessarily more limited version of your list.

FWIW, here's another take on the 40mm M-Rokkor:

https://phillipreeve.net/blog/review-minolta-40mm-2-0-m-rokkor/

Good listicle! I notice and care about optical properties much less than the average photographer (but more than a non-photographer). So I didn't think I would find it interesting enough to read all the entries – but I did. Well written (as always) with a personal touch! By the way I have the collapsible Summicron, and Erwin Puts' Leica Compendium says "the rigid Summicron has a slightly different optical cell than the collapsible one and improved performance. Now four lens elements are of the LaK9 type. The distance between the first and second lens element (the air lens) has been increased from 0.28 mm to 1.52 mm and the shape of the second element is different too."

Can't believe I have (and use) two on the list. I had better not say my preferred "normal" is 40mm, or someone may guess which ones.
When so called "normal" zooms were starting to get used on 35mm, I used a 35 to 70 for a while and I honestly do not remember using it other than at either end...and old prints seem to confirm this. I would twist left or right while lifting the camera, depending on subject.
I even bought a different make of body to match a lens I wanted to use. Er, three times. Cameras were oh-so easy to use in those days.

Interestingly, I have 4 of these lenses.

I have the Pentax that I actually bought from you many years ago. I never used it much because I never much liked the Fuji screw mount camera I had at the time. I gave the camera away to a young aspiring photographer, but kept the lens. I have used it on my Sony mirrorless a few times and do see something special in the results. I should use it more.

I have the Sigma 45mm in Sony mount. I love it for fairly close subjects, but I find that it has really ugly vignetting in the corners at infinity (and this coming from someone who almost always adds vignetting in Lightroom). It may be because the small lens mount on the Sony is blocking part of the image circle.

I have the Panasonic 20mm. I am becoming a fan of the 40mm equivalent focal length after vacillating between 35mm and 50mm for many years. I find that it focuses fast enough on Panasonic cameras for the most part, but on my OM-1 it is very annoyingly slow. Maybe it was good that you didn't wait for the E-M1. I am seriously considering the fairly new Olympus 20mm f/1.4 to use on the OM-1.

Finally, I have the Olympus 50mm Macro. This is actually my most recent purchase of the four. I got it when experimenting with film again starting a couple of years ago. I found that I was having difficulty focusing any of my manual focus 35mm cameras and needed to find something with adjustable diopters. The camera I ended up with was an Olympus OM-4 (which I don't particularly like, but it is easy to focus). I'm sure this is a great lens, but I prefer using the lighter 50mm f/1.8. I'm using film to get something that looks very different from digital and mostly using pushed Tri-X developed to increase grain. Under these conditions, the difference between these two lenses is lost.

In 1981 when I was fifteen my father gave me my first "real" camera, a Chinon CE4S with a kit 50/1,9 lens. The camera certainly did what it was supposed to do, but that normal lens was probably the sharpest I ever came across. Then and now. That was the last I saw of my father and later I learned that he was busy living with his other family. Many years later, in the summer of 2022, I was at a rural barn sale in the north of Sweden and I was eyeing the used cameras-shelf, expecting nothing much. As I turned to walk away, I could feel the stare from behind and, sure enough, there it was: a beaten up Chinon CE4S with the sharpest normal lens ever. My first thought was nah, I need to look forward, not back. But after a few steps I turned back again and put the camera in my basket. Price: 40 kr or 4 dollars.Plus a set of new batteries of course. Now I keep that camera and lens in the bottom drawer at work for the lunch walks. But really, 40 seems to be the new 50, and my favourite commuter kit is my Minolta CLE with the M-Rokkor 40/2, for people- and street photography along the way to and from work.

The best 50 I’ve used was the Canon EF 1.4 -maybe I got lucky. Unfortunately it was fragile and wore out, so I replaced it with the 1.2 version. That’s also great. Not better than the 1.4, (maybe a bit worse) but the photos have a special look. I also use the latest non-APO Summicron. It’s great too. It is super-transparent and balanced. I don’t notice any character, it’s like looking at the subject with nothing in between.

You mentioned mine pick, the Fujifilm XF 35mm ƒ/1.4 R.

One of Fujifilm's first lenses. It's small, has character open and sharp closed. Many dismiss it as outdated because it's been around for so long. They would be wrong.

The SummiRok (Summicron-C / M-Rokkor) 40mm is actually a Leitz design. Lens savant Marco Cavina did an article on the M-Rokkors (note the Google Translate tool).
Not the whole article can be read without a subscription, but you can still find some info about the little darling.

Voigtlander 40mm f2 Ultra on APSC ( 64mm equivalent ) is my favourite lens for work & play.

My favorite was the Nikkor 58mm f/1.4 that I used with a Nikon D750. It's the one lens I miss from my Nikon days. The 58mm seems similar to what I'm reading about the Fuji 35mm f/1.4 the 58mm has a really beautiful look wide open. But when you step down to f/4 and beyond it becomes sharp like most 50mm's. The 58mm unlike the Fuji 35mm is pretty expensive.

I use the Fuji 35mm f/2 at the moment, and am happy with it. I'm a 50mm-e guy. I am sometimes tempted to add the 35mm f/1.4.

Fun listicle.

Is the Super Multi Coated 50mm f/1.4 Takumar different optically than the slightly later SMC Takumar? Both are 7 element and do not have thorium elements. I thought only the mechanical mount was modified to have a rubber focus ring.

Have had more than one of your #10, including the thorium version. Back in the day, I (and others) would shoot at f/16 when possible, because we wanted everything in focus. No longer in fashion. It was only much later that I “learned” that lenses were at their best at a middle aperture.

Just last week, I needed a panoramic photo with the subject very close and the background out of focus, but recognizable. My “decades of experience” told me that I needed a 50mm f/1.7 full frame. The background was so fuzzy that Photoshop couldn’t stitch the files! To get what I wanted, I ended up using a 135mm lens stopped down to f/8!

Always learning …

I owned the #10 and still have the #1 on your list. The Takumar came with my first camera, the Spotmatic. This was my companion on the ocean voyage to New Zealand in 1971. I wish I still had it.

I gasped with delight when I saw the Minolta M-Rokkor at #1. I'm looking at this lens now, mounted on my CLE. There are twelve exposed frames on the loaded roll of FP4 -- it won't be long before I develop this in ID11. Your list has inspired me to be extra-selective in what I choose for the next two dozen shots.

I'm partial to my Hasselblad CF Zeiss T* 80mm f/2.8. As for 35mm, never cared much for 50-55mm focal length lenses.

I seem to remember that you once spoke highly of the Pentax 35mm F2.8 Limited Macro (for APS-C DSLRs). Maybe not good enough to enter this top 10, but I purchased it in part due to your review, and I really liked it. I believe I still have it somewhere, although I don't own a Pentax any longer.

I am now using a Fuji camera, and taking good note of your (and commenters') appreciation of the 35mm F1.4. I just need to decide if I prefer the character and small size of this lens, or the "transparency" of the later 33mm F1.4.

80mm 2.8 Planar?

I was always rather fond of my Super-Symmar 210mm....

Back in the Camera & Darkroom days, I recall a certain M Johnston being enamoured with the Bronica PS 80mm f2.8 as one his favourite lenses.

Great article.

Loved the Xenotar on the Exakta 66 but the camera....

I would politely suggest the Olympus 42mm f1.7 on the SP35, the Rodenstock 90mm f3.5 on the Linhof 220 amongst others. Just nice lenses.

Weirdly, I prefer the Leica version of the 40mm f2 because it isn't as good as the Rokkor. The Leica's coating is softer (or something). It has more character, AKA flaws.

["Photogeeks each have their own peculiar afflictions or areas of obsession, and Mike Johnston’s happens to be lenses. He is faithless, however, transferring his loyalties from one lens to another in a most disconcertingly philandering manner. He is currently enamored of a particular fast Pentax lens. But wait till the weather changes; his loyalties and enthusiasm will have shifted." -- Thumbnail bio on The Luminous Landscape]

As an early adapter of Micro Four Thirds I used the 20mm f/1.7 for many years. When it was replaced by the metal 20mm f/1.7 II I gave the old one to a friend. I was never happy with the newer version because of the much higher contrast. Recently I sold it because sometimes it made such a mess of blurry backgrounds and replaced it by the OM System 20mm f/1.4. Especially in low light and evening sceneries in urban environments the difference is huge. I also had the Panasonic Leica 25mm f/1.4 for a while. Sharp enough except wide open, and again a contrast to high for my taste. Even though the 25mm f/1.7 is not as solid, the images pleased me more than the f/1.4. At the moment I have the Olympus 25mm f/1.8 and the bigger f/1.2. The last one is the best 25mm of the bunch, although it's not as good as the 20mm f/1.4 (or the stunning 17mm f/1.2 and 45mm f/1.2). I might not be an expert on this, but surely a neurotic.
As designer I worked with many professional photographers in the past. Of course you can make interesting images even with cheap gear, but in general it always was: the bigger the better. As a hobby photographer it might be the other way around.
Some of the lenses on my hitparade of normals are: Carl Zeiss 45mm f/1.8 for Contax G, Nikon 55mm f/2.8 macro Nikkor, Pentax Takumar 105mm f/2.5, Mamiya 7 80mm f/4 and Carl Zeiss 80mm f/2.8 on the Rolleiflex TLR.

For me a real sleeper is the Olympus 75mm f1.8 lens. A razor sharp lens that doesn't get any attention. Bill

My favorite normal of "all time" is the 80 mm f/4 Plasmat-derivative for the Mamiya 7 and 7II. At least my copy, which has produced photos with breathtaking microcontrast and resolution. I've used other lenses with this camera (43 mm, 65 mm, 150 mm), which in my opinion are all very good, but none of them as (optically) good as the 80 mm (incidentally, if one ignores the aspect ratio of the photos, works out to about 40 mm in miniature format).

I have had, and still have, so many lenses that perform so well that it’s hard to call one out as a true favorite. I probably did encourage Mike to consider that Sigma 45mm DG DN; it really is superb in every meaningful dimension (sharpness, color, contrast, weight, size , build, and cost). In fact I also like its 35mm and 65mm DG DN siblings for the same reasons! Sigma’s rise from the so-so 3rd party budget lens ranks into the upper echelon of optical designers has been truly remarkable.

I have so many candidates for “best” or “favorite” normal lenses…So much today depends heavily on the camera’s integration and communication with the lens’s electronics. But if I had to make a choice at this moment mine would be between the APO-Summicron 43mm F2 and the Summilux 28mm F1.7 on Leica’s Q3-43 and Q3 fixed-lens cameras, respectively. Their performance is simply breathtaking. If you’ve never tried a Q3 and you love lens characteristics you owe it to yourself to rent or borrow one for a week or so.

I'm a Zeiss guy these days. The 50/1.4 Planar ZF.2 for Nikon and the Leica M-mount 50/2 Planar adapted for use on Nikon Z. Great lenses with a balance of contrast, sharpness, tonality and depth better than anything else I've used. Plus they're built well and function smoothly. A pleasure to use and a joy to behold the results.

I bought the Fuji 35/2 along with my first X-Pro1. I later added the 35/1.4 because it got such glowing reviews. Yet I still like the ƒ/2 version better. I can't see enough difference in the photos I take with these lenses to say one is better than the other. I just like the smaller size of the ƒ/2 version, I guess.

And I still have a warm spot in my heart for the Nikkor-S 50/1.4 that I had on my first Nikon F camera back in the early 1970s. I finally managed to locate and buy one in really good condition recently. Nostalgia? You betcha. But the photos from this lens have a very nice look and I enjoy handling it.

Interesting: I was a working commercial photographer for 37 years, and used lots of different equipment in different formats. But I couldn't begin to come up with a comparable list, mostly because when I respond to a photo, "resolution", or "micro-contrast", or "bokeh" are total non-factors for me. I respond, I think, entirely to content and composition.

Different folks, different strokes.

"I have owned or used the Carl Zeiss @ 50/1.4, the AF-Nikkor 50/1.4, the Canon EF 50/1.4, the Leica R 50/1.4 (the old one with the 55mm filter thread), a Yashica 50/1.4, The Leica M 50/1.4, and the Voigtlaender Nokton 50/1.5. For all-around image quality in real pictures, the Pentax 50/1.4 is my favorite of them all. The FA 50/1.7 (which I have used) is a very good lens. But the FA 50/1.4 is a great lens."

-- Mike Johnston

[As I reads that I was thinking, "hey, I've owned all those lenses too...." --Mike]

Olympus 75mm f1.8 a razor blade lens ! One of the sharpest lenses that I own . Bill

I have #7 and #10, both good choices. The 8-element Takumar is NOT radioactive. The later 7-element versions have thoriated glass. I have both versions and just confirmed this with a Geiger counter. The mount end of my copy of the 7-element SMC reads about 0.35 mR/hr.

[You're right Terry--I got it backwards. But not all the 7-element versions were thoriated. --Mike]

I am unwilling to admit how many of these I own.

When this page is translated:
https://lensreview.xyz/nikon-nikkor-50-1-8-d-analyze/

It includes:
This Nikon 50mm f/1.8 is generally referred to as a "bait lens", and if you buy it on impulse due to its low price, it is a product that has a terrible curse-like power that will drag you into a dark and deep lens swamp.

I have adopted the term “lens swamp”. I have slowly modified my environment so that I live in one . . .


Voltz

I haven't owned or used nearly the number of normal lenses that other contributors have. But the only one I ever used that got comments from non-photographers was when I did event and portrait/people photography with the Minolta 50/1.4. Paired with a Sony a850, there was just something terrific about its rendering, the way it handled the colors of skin tones, and the transition from in-focus to out-of-focus areas.

"One of my absolute favorites was a macro lens that wasn't quite at its best in the macro range—even though Olympus had incomparable expertise in making macros! It's a 1:2 macro, not 1:1."

It may help to know Oly's aim at the time. They were seriously optimizing their macro and short mount—bellows lenses. You want infinity to 1:2, use the 50/2 or 50/3.5 macro. You want 1:1, use the 80/4. The later Auto version on their AutoTube handles like a normal lens.

Back when, I did some careful testing on a 5D of my various film era macro lenses vs. a Tamron 90/2.8 Macro. At 1:2, the Oly OM 50/3.5 was excellent, sharp, flat field to the corners, best of the old bunch.

The newer, AF Tamron 90/2.8, 1:1 whuped them all in resolution, distortion, even illumination, edge sharpness - and all that at f2.8, vs. f8 or f11 for the older lenses.

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