Lens specs and pricing information
This review was very hard to be objective about. You see, I’ve been waiting impatiently for Nikon to release this lens for more than five years. At first glance, one would think that the increasingly light-sensitive sensors of DSLRs would kill off demand for fast primes, but the reverse has been true — and the reasons are simple. Having the option for limited depth-of-field and as much light sensitivity as possible is great, and now there’s not nearly so much guesswork about “was that shot actually in focus or not?” There are a lot more choices now than “f/8 and be there.”
I was clearly excited about this, since my non-photographer girlfriend asked me “What’s so special about this lens?”
Nothing, in a way. 35mm is a pretty unexciting focal length, on its face. Slightly wide, it doesn’t have the warped-corner look of an ultra-wide. It doesn’t have the instant eye-candy look of an exotic telephoto lens. It’s just a workhorse focal length, that strips everything down and focuses on content, and for general coverage, it is well-paired with moderate telephoto lenses like an 85mm f/1.4 or 70-200mm f/2.8.
Which made it so deeply strange that Nikon hadn’t made a professional lens in this focal length since 1981 (and that one wasn’t regarded as one of their best lenses.
There’s a lot of anticipation here to fill, especially since the new lens, at $1800, isn’t cheap, especially when you can get a full-frame 35mm f/2 for $360, or a DX 35mm f/1.8 for under $200. Can it live up to the hype?
Let me just get this out of the way: For most users, no. If you’re using an entry-level DX camera because that’s where your budget is, buy the 35mm f/1.8 for one-ninth the price. You’ll love it, and if you get into hefty full-frame gear later, you can always sell it for almost the same price.
For me? The lens is not 100 percent perfect, but I am thrilled. And here’s why.
BUILD: Not everyone likes the hard plastic build of modern Nikon professional lenses, but to me it creates an attractive, sturdy package. The lens hood is nice and stiff and easily reversible. And it’s big — almost as big as the 24mm and 85mm f/1.4 lenses in the same family. For lots of people, this will be kind of a shame because a 35mm is a great walk-around focal length, and this is really bulky for a lens to carry on you all day every day. For me, who mostly uses these on professional shoots with giant D3s cameras, it’s not quite big enough — I strongly prefer native 77mm filters on my lenses, instead of the 67mm ring this has. But that’s what step-up rings are for.
IMAGE QUALITY: Extremely good, but likely not an absolute resolution champ like the 100mm f/2 Makro. It really seems like this lens was optimized for wide-open performance, so the difference between wide-open and middle-apertures is not as great as with most lenses — f/1.4 is really sharp, and f/8 is just a bit more sharp, but you can find sharper lenses if you look hard. It’s great for me, because if I paid for an f/1.4 lens I want to use it near-wide-open unless I have a good reason not to, but there are easier choices for landscape and studio shooters.
Here’s a comparison at f/8 and f/1.4, which also shows the good close-focus this lens features:

The bokeh is as good as I have come to expect from recent Nikon lenses. Nice transitions, good highlights:

Example of good foreground bokeh, also a lack of flare despite multiple light sources:

AUTOFOCUS: Users expecting the same lighting speed of the Canon 35mm f/1.4L will be disappointed at first — like the new Nikon 24mm and 85mm f/1.4s, this is not a speed champ, being just a bit faster than the 24. But it’s very accurate, even at wide apertures — noticeably more so in difficult focusing situations than the 24mm f/1.4 (which I also love, despite its trickiness). I could see right away that it was much easier to get in-focus f/1.4 shots on a dark dance floor with this than with the 24, though not quite as easy as the ludicrously fast-and-accurate 24-70mm f/2.8. I came to trust it pretty quickly.
NOTE: My copy needed serious AF micro-adjustment, about -15. This was not true of my 24G or 85G, but has been true of other lenses like the 135mm f/2. Be sure to test your lenses thoroughly. Micro-adjustment is the best feature invented for cameras since digital sensors.

Even in the near-darkness of ISO 12,800 at f/1.4, it was able to lock on well:

Speaking of ISO 12,800, this next one shows why we have f/1.4 lenses in the first place. The Church of San Frediano in Lucca, Tuscany is absolutely gorgeous, but to protect the art, much of it is too dark to make out with the naked eye. This part of the ceiling, captured at 1/15th, ISO 12,800, f/1.4, was almost black to my eye. I would have needed a tripod to capture it otherwise.

Final verdict: This is going to be an extremely valuable part of my bag, and it was well worth the cost. Now that this is a new year, I will be restarting the Photo of the Day archive, and keep an eye out for lots of photos taken with the 35 there.
More Photos at f/1.4:


Great handling of backlight


Lastly, here’s one for full-res download, with all the bokeh you can handle. Click for full-size:
Stefano Choi - Great review Ryan and I am excited to take my own copy through it’s paces for a wedding this weekend.
nadine - Gggggah. If only I can buy one!
Thanks for the review!
Sam - Awesome review man. I love this lens and probably will be permanently attached to my camera.
matt shumate - While the focal length might not be exciting. Everything else about this lens is. It’s best feature to me is the way it handles strong backlight. Great review Ryan. Have to agree with every word.
Joseph Yarrow - I’m so pleased that this lens is that sharp at f1.4
Thanks for the honest review ryan.
Joshua Gull - Great review Ryan. I want this lens baaad.
Sam Hurd - nicely done. i’m thinking instead of posting my review i’ll just post a link to yours ;)
Dennis Pike - “He went to Jared!!!!!!” sorry, I couldn’t resist, I’m sure you hate those commercials as much as I do.
nice review. I have been a fast zoom shooter for a while, but have been thinking about heading the way of faster primes lately.
Teresa K - Fantastic review Ryan. I looooooove this lens and am so excited that Nikon now has a truly professional line-up of prime lenses.
Jashim - Great review Ryan! Nikon should def start paying you a pretty penny. You’re reviews make me want to buy all the lenses!! I’m def looking forward to adding this to my bag.
Chris Aram - Thanks again for taking the time to review this! I’m working toward the 24 1.4 first … I prefer wider angles and longer telephotos … the 35mm is in a bit of an odd “no-mans land” in terms of the way I usually shoot. But maybe some day :D
Mark - Thanks heaps for this Ryan, Looking forward to what you get up to with this lens!!
George Terry - looking forward to reading your review of the 35mm f1/4G lens
elliot - You should have explained to DX users that a 35mm lens (at any price or wide aperture) is not going to offer the benefits that make it useful to you (and me). The 1.5x lens factor makes this mile wide-angle a normal-ish 53mm equivalent. If you want the look of a 35mm in DX format you need to look at a 20mm focal length … and there’s nothing fast there except for Sigma’s giant 20/1.8 prime which is very soft wide open (and a bit slow to AF, and a bit noisy).
My own experience is that in DX the best image quality at 20mm for the price is Tamron’s 17-50mm f/2.8 zoom, but that’s no f/1.4 speed demon.
In other words, for the DX user there is no exact comparison; you can’t get there from here. But for 25%-30% of the price of the 25/1.4 you can get to the general neighborhood.
Ryan Brenizer - In general, I tailor the level of writing to the intended user base. Anyone that doesn’t know the effect of a DX crop probably isn’t in the market for an $1800 lens.
fotograf nunta Iasi - Thx for review; I am a bit disappointed about plastic and focus speed, but the result are awesome.
Elliot - Ryan then your tailoring shouldn’t have compared/recommended a 35mm for DX since it has a different look from the one you like and discuss in FX. If someone is looking to spend $1800-ish for a 35mm equivalent you should have mentioned the Nikon 24/1.4.
fotograf lublin - Great review!!
Michael J Dunham - Great review, I have been eyeing this lense for awhile, I did switch from canon recently and have been missing my 50 1.2l, I am hoping to fill that gap with the 35 ;)
Fred - Probably one of the best reviews for this lens on the web. I’ve been using the new 24mm prime for the past few weddings and it’s a little too wide for me although the images are sick!! I’ve been hearing rumors of a Nikon 50mm 1.2 coming out soon but I guess there’s no reason to wait since this lens is out now. Thanks again for the review and I’m glad there’s a blogger out there that knows what he’s talking about!
Yuriy - this is awesome i am so buying it!
Frank - I adore this lens. I struggled with deciding between the 24 1.4 and this fast 35. Extremely glad that I chose this lens. For others, the exact opposite will make sense. This is tack sharp and the relatively close focusing abilities will allow you to fill the frame if needed.
Rarely leaves my camera and I can actually see myself selling the 24-70 f/2.8 due to this addition especially since I’m not a pro photog and I never really “need” the convenience of a zoom…its just more convenient.
Really glad to hear that you like the X100. I ordered it based on my extreme preference for this focal length and its low-light capabilities. And carrying an FX body with the 35 1.4 everywhere just gets cumbersome and somewhat nerdy. I’ll be a trendy nerd with this.
Reviews have definitely pointed out some flaws but its definitely nice to see your unbiased and non-commercially influence review. Also, really like your work. Great job.
Peavey - tnx for the full-res one, the onion rings in teh bokeh and unacceptable sharpness @f/1.4 makes this pretty lens disappointing. proof that when there’s not much competition on the market the manufacturers get very lame.. I miss the days when minolta, pentax, contax and olympus were fighting hard for their slice on the market, those were the days when paying extra $$$ for nikkors really made your money worth.
Dan - Thanks for the review. The new samyang 35mm f1.4 is basically much as sharp wide open on FF with the same decent bokeh at under third of the price, sadly no AF but it’s well worth a look check out it’s review on photozone
Dan - Bought the Samyang 35mm f1.4 a few months ago, was shooting it on a d300 were it was great. Got a d700 for my trip to japan,just a few weeks back, got so many great shots with the 35mm f1.4, it’s amazingly sharp even opened wide. No AF but hey it’s around 1/3 of the price of the Nikon, so highly recommended, if you re not super rich.
Samyang are bring out a 24mm f1.4 in F mount next year, i hope its as good as the Nikon version!
yuriy - Just ordered the lens, you have wonderful sample images thank you!
Richard D. Berman - 24mm or 35 mm? I already own the superb 24-70, 17-35, qnd 14-24. I had read how great the 24mm f 1.4 lens is. Any opinions???????
Richard Berman - I already own 14-24, 17-35, and 24-70 lenses. Would you recommend the 35 f1.4 or the 24 f1.4? I understand there is duplication. However, the lens speed is impressive. I also own the 50mm f1.4. All suggestions are greatly appreciated.
Dr.Farzin - The best review . beats Chuck Norris . ( Ken ROCKWELL ) .aND i,M DELIGHTED TO HAVE ONE .