Could not resist the Laowa macro 2.5-5.0

… the final conclusion in my last macro article „finally, I will wait for the arrival of the Nikkor Z 105mm Micro S in 2021“. Hence, Nikon did not release any new Z lens the last 7 months! Even though the lens line-up is way behind Sony and Canon mirrorless – what a „§#*+“

Since the (very last) photokina 2019 show in Köln I was aware of Laowa’s exotic lens collection. At their booth I had a look but did not test any lens as I did not have the FTZ for my Nikon Z7 with me. But as there a great videos and articles about macro out there

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29 stacked pictures with Laowa 25mm m=4.5 1/200 f2.8 ISO100

You can order your Laowa at their venus optics shop in Hong-Kong or as I did here in Germany via the distributor Brenner and tested the Laowa 100mm macro and this Laowa 25mm in the Photo Universal shop under corona rules. Now, let’s start…

How much magnification?

I did my square counting test for measuring the real magnification in 6 different settings: directly mounted on Z7, mounted on bellow at minimum 48mm and maximum 208mm distance, at Laowa lens magnification minimum 2.5 and maximum 5.0.

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Magnificationno bellowsNikon PB-6 bellow
Lens@48mm@208mm
Laowa 25mm f2.8 m=2.52.64.611.2
Laowa 25mm f2.8 m=5.04.86.813.4
compared to
Nikkor 50mm f1.8D min focus0.21.14.3
Nikkor 105mm f2.8 min focus1.01.74.0

Although the Laowa does not reach the 5.0 magnification, it shows enough details with 4.8 and reaches up to incredible 13.4 on the bellows. How useful this is I will test later, but getting enough light will be a challenge.

The distance between sensor and the front of lens is 155mm at 1:2.5 and extends to 210mm at 1:5.0. The distance between lens and object is between 40-45mm in all cases and therefore, there is enough space for light positioning.

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37 pictures stacked 1/200 f4 ISO100

How much DoF?

The next natural question is, which aperture is appropriate for which situation. I observed defraction with m=2.5 at f8 and above, with m=5.0 it starts already at f5.6. But sharpness is a wicked thing here. The following test will show how subjective measurements can get. I used a ruler with 0.25mm resolution to estimate DoF

f

m=2.5

m=5.0

2.8

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4.0

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5.6

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8

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11

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16

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18

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Measuring the real Depth-of-Field (DoF) from the above pictures is not straight forward, as I positioned the rule 45° from the lens plane. To calculate the DoF a we need to correct the measured distance c with cos 45° as depicted in the chart

and compare this to the theoretical DoF calculated based on Zerene table and formula without considering diffraction.

f
@ m=2.5
f
effective
cDoF
measured
DoF
Laowa
2.89.80.2500.1770.090
4.0140.5000.3540.129
5.619.61.0000.7070.180
8281.0000.7070.257
1138,51.0000.7070.354
16561.5001.0610.514
18631.7501.237
f @ m=5.0cDoF
measured
DOF
Laowa
2.8<0.250<0.1770.050
4.00.2500.1770.071
5.60.5000.3540.100
80.5000.3540.143
110.7500.5300.196
160.7500.5300.286
181.0000.707

Looks like I am too optimistic with DoF wide open. The photo stacking distance will show how much DoF is required to get sharp results.

<more to come – next weekend ;-)>

Ein Gedanke zu „Could not resist the Laowa macro 2.5-5.0“

  1. Thanks for the excellent description: you get to the heart of your topic without unneccessary framwork. I own the Laowa 25mm ultra macro myself: a very specific but excellent lens.
    All the best!
    Renke

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