Batis 85 1.8 so sánh với 135f1.8

The Zeiss Batis 1.8/85mm lens has generated less excitement than any other Batis. Perhaps because it falls between the stools of two competitors: the excellent and cheaper Sony 1.8/85, and the Sony G Master 1.4/85. People think if you don’t want the GM lens, with it’s beautiful bokeh and low mechanical vignetting, you should maximise your savings get the Sony.

Often in the introduction to reviews we write teasers – Is this true? Read on to find out!! No teaser here. It’s not true. By all means get the Sony if you aren’t up for the added cost of the Batis. But the Batis is a great lens, worth the price if you can easily afford it and are looking for an all-rounder. Now for the teaser: read on to find out why.

Samples

Contents

Specifications

Diameter max 92 mm Length 92 mm Filter Thread 67 mm Weight [w/o adapter] 475 g Minimum Focusing Distance 0.8m Maximum Magnification 1:7.9 Number of aperture blades 9 [curved] Elements/ Groups 11/8

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Features, Build Quality and Handling

The build quality of the lens is excellent. It has the usual Batis heavy duty outer shell and tough finish, and it has gaskets for weather sealing on the lens mount, and is claimed to be well sealed internally. It comes with a substantial hood which does a good job of shading the lens. Batis design is “new Zeiss” and has the same design language as Milvus lenses. People seem to be very divided on this; some love it, others hate it. I’m in the middle: I think it looks nice and slick, but probably prefer the “classic” look.

The very solid lens body is smooth and featureless. This choice means that there is no focus hold button, and no MF-AF button. If you depend on those that will be an annoyance. It doesn’t worry me at all: I have a range of lenses, and I want them all to work the same way, so I have to have a dedicated button on camera to toggle AF and MF. I don’t know anyone [surely there are some] who use the focus hold button for focus hold. But many use if for eye-AF: however with the version 3 firmware for the A7 series, and the version 5 for A9, eyeAF does not have to be actuated with a button anymore.

There is, as usual for Batis, an OLED display which tells you focus distance and DOF. I’ve sometimes used it as a rough indication of focus distance when focussing manually before putting the camera to my eye. I’ve never used it as a DOF scale.

At 475g the lens is relatively light for its speed and quality, though as with most Batis lenses it’s a bit larger than you might expect.

The focus ring is the smooth rubber ring that new generation Zeiss comes with. I actually rather like it for focussing – it’s easy to find with your fingers [though it may not be with gloves on – I live in a fairly warm climate] and very smooth. It does rather attract dust, but it’s fairly easy to clean. But the only ergonomic thing I don’t much like is related to manual focus: like all Batis lenses the focus throw is dependent on how fast you turn the focus ring—”non-linear”. Again this is divisive; some love it [because you can quickly make a big change in focus, and then fine tune], others hate it [because they find it unpredictable and hard to control]. Again I’m sort of in between. I would prefer linear focus, but can put up with non-linear and in some situations it’s useful. Zeiss should make firmware available to convert these lenses to linear focus for those of us that prefer it; surely that would be trivial.

The lens has OSS – optical image stabilisation. This will be very useful for users of the first generation A7 bodies that have no in body stabilisation [IBIS]. On later generation bodies the stabilising is split between lens and body; two axes on the lens, and three on the body. In theory this could provide better stabilisation than pure IBIS, but in practice it doesn’t seem to make a difference with this or similar focal lengths.

Infinity Resolution

Here’s the usual infinity resolution image. As usual recently, I have taken to moving the camera so as to get the same subject in each location, to make comparison easier. I focussed when the subject was central, and did not change focus for midfield [intersection of rule of thirds lines] and extreme corner.

We can get resolution out of the way quickly. It’s terrific. Centre and midfield are extremely good from wide open, and close to outstanding at mid apertures. The extreme corners are good wide open, though improvement is noticeable at f2.8 and reaches its best at f4. The first, slight, visual signs of diffraction occur at f8. In terms of across the image sharpness viewed at the whole image level even printing large [ie not pixel peeping on your screen], the lens can be used from wide open: and the centre and midfield can be pixel peeped as well. The contrast is very high as well.

Maybe we need an article about how we use evaluative language for resolution one day. But for now I can tell you roughly how I use it. Good and very good resolution means that, unless you examine an extremely large print [say a bit less than a metre in diagonal] or the whole image on a high res 30″ very closely, you can’t tell that there is any improvement possible [of course you could if you pixel peep]. Excellent for me means that you could not notice any improvement no matter how closely you stare at normal viewing distances. Excellent is also my personal high standard of what it is sensible to care about. Nothing more will make images sharper in most of their intended uses. Outstanding is just more of this goodness: it looks a bit better when you pixel peep at 1:1/42MP. Sometimes I’ll use the phrase “class leading” and of course this varies a bit over time: it means the kind of quality that the absolute technically best lens has at the moment [of course a lens could be class leading in some respects but not others]. Currently class leading lenses have absurdly high reoslution, higher than outstanding, and which can only be distinguished at 1:1/42MP.

If you are wondering about the superb and inexpensive Sony 1.8/85, it’s hard to compare real world results taken in different conditions. But have a look at Roger Cicala’s MTF bench tests over at LensRentals: they tell a clear story. While the Sony is very fine, the Batis is even better, both in the centre and off axis. Why have quite reasonable people thought there was little difference? Well if you look at Lens Rentals variation charts, you can see that while the Batis is on average noticeably better than the Sony, in their sample of ten, the worst Batis [while good] was worse than the best Sony. So there are pairs of samples out there which support this view. But on average you will get a better Batis than Sony in terms of resolution, and if you have good copies of both the Batis will be better. And variation is reasonable, too, so you aren’t playing an unpleasant lottery with either of these lenses.

Portrait Distance Resolution

One of the primary uses of a fairly fast 85mm lens is for portraiture. What matters here is not so much even resolution across the frame, but that the eye of your subject, at whatever place you put it in the frame, is sharp when you focus on it. In past reviews I have used a live subject and focused on their eye, but this both requires a cooperative friend, and is subject to possible movement.

Instead I have focused on bank notes, which we also often use for MOD [minimum object distance] tests.

I focused at 2.2 metres, which is a nice half-body to head-and shoulders distance for portraiture. I focussed first in the centre, and then at the rule-of-thirds intersection. Any further into the corners in an unlikely location for an eye in a portrait.

For reference, the two eyes of the Ben Franklin in this image together are about as wide as a regular human eye. This is life-size.

First, wide open at f1.8. Left is centre, right rule of thirds intersection.

Second stopped down to f2.8: again left is centre, right is rule of thirds intersection.

This is extremely good performance. Bearing in mind that a real human eye occupies the same size as both eyes and the area between them in the banknote, at portrait distance this shows that it really doesn’t matter where you place your eye or what aperture you use, the B85 will deliver extremely high resolution. Use the aperture for creative effect rather than additional sharpness, and place the eye wherever you like [other locations, including the edge, that I tried looked similar].

Minimum Object Distance Performance

The Batis 85 focuses down to 80cm. Here is the same detailed banknote image, also at life-size, wide open and at f2.8

Wide open is left, f2.8 is right.

Performance here is exemplary. Excellent wide open, just a touch contrastier at f2.8. No visible improvement on further stopping down. This performance suggests that excellent results could be achieved using extension tubes if closer focus is desired [if performance is already a bit weak at MOD without extension tubes, it tends to fall apart if the lens is forced to focus closer with tubes].

Bokeh

Here is an aperture series showing the bokeh when there is a very busy but relatively distant background [from 4m behind subject], focused at about 2.5m [typical portrait distance].

Optical Vignetting and the Swirl Effect

At the wides apertures most lenses cut off the bokeh balls so they are not perfectly round. This has two effects: one is that when there are specular highlights in the background, instead of being round, they are “cat’s eyes” in the corners. The other effect is that this slight deformation of out of focus structures makes the background swirl a little. Some people seek out old designs that have huge amounts of optical vignetting to achieve this swirl [such as the Helios 44-2].

Lets start with an examination of this optical vignetting [the phenomena, sometimes called mechanical vignetting though these are slightly different phenomena: we’ll have an article explaining this later]

Optical vignetting is the usual cause of the “cats eye” effect which is in turn the cause of slight swirliness in the bokeh:

Here is wide open at f1.8.

Left is the extreme corner, mid is rule of thirds intersection, right is centre.

Here is f2.8

And finally f4.

Wide open the aperture is of course smooth, but we are seeing noticeable cats eyes in both the corner and mid. By f2.8 the mid is regular, and by f4 the corner is almost regular. The angularity is the worst case; in some situations it can appear rounder, depending on exact distances etc.

This is fairly typical for a lens of this class. Zeiss, for example, seems to target a certain amount of optical vignetting wide open regardless of lens speed. This means for example that you will get better optical vignetting performance with an f1.4 lens stopped down to f2, than an f2 lens wide open.

And here is the very slight swirl you get in the background at certain distances because of it at full aperture. I judge this to be typical for a 1.8/85 close to wide open [obviously a faster lens stopped down to f1.8 will be typically a bit better here].

At slightly greater distances from about f1.8-f2.4 you can see more swirl and a bit of edge brightness.

And finally, here is a perhaps unflattering image produced as a “scary Halloween” photo, which I use to show how the bokeh balls look wide open look in close portraits. You can see the cat’s eye effect [as per the technical image above]. This is no worse than any other 1.8/85 I know, but of course a faster lens stopped down to f 1.8 would do better [and the GM 1.4/85 does better wide open – that is the best thing about that lens, at the price of a bit of contrast]. One good thing about the the Batis is in this comparison is how evenly illuminated the bokeh balls are.

Vignetting [Corner Shading]

Vignetting in this sense is a lack of even illumination across the image field. It is the result of a mixture of causes; usually optical vignetting and natural vignetting. Natural vignetting is the residual vignetting which is not reduced by stopping down. The increase in vignetting relative to this at wider apertures is usually another effect of the optical vignetting we discussed above.

The Batis 85 measures about 2 stops vignetting in the corners wide open; it isn’t field relevant by f5.6 and largely gone by f8. This is perhaps average to slightly higher than average performance for a lens like this. It can be completely corrected by a profile in the RAW converter of your choice, or it can be corrected in camera if you prefer, in which case you will never see it [even in RAWs]. I prefer not to correct in camera, as in many situations the vignetting looks good, and correction will create more noise in the corners.

Here’s a visual guide:

Chromatic Aberration

There’s no visible lateral chromatic aberration [LaCA] though presumably there is at least some which is corrected via the mandatory profile in Lightroom or C1. Since lateral CA correction is essentially losslessly correctable, there’s no point is using a niche converter [or taping the contacts] to reveal the underlying LaCA.

Longitudinal chromatic aberration is another matter. It’s time consuming to correct without bad side effects, and even that may be imperfect, so it’s important to keep an eye on it.

Here’s a guide to the LoCA:

The LoCA is largely in the form of spherochromatism; it is visible wide open, and largely gone by f4. After f4 it can’t be seen.

The performance is good – as good as any other 85mm lens – but not as good as the very best recent apochromatic lenses for the E mount like the CV Apo Lanthars or the Batis Apo Sonnar 135mm. But it wasn’t that long ago that manufacturer would have called this level of colour correction APO.

Distortion and Distortion Correction

The Batis 85 has, as far as I can work out, about 2% pincushion distortion uncorrected [there are reports there of it being 3%]. Zeiss’ own datasheet reports 0.2%, but this this after the optional correction profile is applied. I won’t show an image which is designed to show what this much distortion looks like; one image is in any case misleading [and many of you know already]. Instead play with lightroom and add a little pincushion distortion [between -2 and -3 on the distortion slider – not much] to a range of images – that will help you visualise it!

This is not huge, but a little more than most short tele lenses, without being eggregious. But it is enough that you might sometimes want to enable correction, which will cost you a little image quality in the corners and midframe.

First a rant: a well known Californian reviewer, whom I respect a lot, has recently been making the case that we hear elsewhere that relying on software to correct distortion is always a bad idea and prevents peak performance. There’s something right about this, but also a lot wrong, and this is a good opportunity to clarify.

Here’s what is true: for a given level of sharpness and micro contrast in a lens, if significant distortion correction is applied, you will lose a bit of sharpness. So it’s a bad idea, right?

No! Because we know only that the corrected image is a little less sharp than the uncorrected one. We don’t know how sharp the lens would have been had it been designed with lower native distortion. Correcting distortion optically can lower sharpness. Nothing in optical design is free. If the production costs of a lens are kept fixed, it may well be that the post correction sharpness of a slightly higher distortion lens, may be sharper than the uncorrected sharpness of the lens if it had been designed to have lower distortion without extra cost.

Now super expensive no-compromise 1.5kg lenses we can expect to be designed for super low distortion and all other aberrations minimised. But as soon as we try to reduce size and cost [or maybe just size] then distortion correction by software could well be, for some lenses, the best overall compromise in terms of sharpness and other aberrations. For possibly the post correction sharpness is as good as the sharpness would have been in the alternative low distortion [same size and cost] designs. Of course we never see the alternatives, so we can’t be sure.

Anyway: the important thing is what we lose when we correct distortion: so let’s see. I have taken a sharpness image from the corner, and the rule of thirds intersection, and compared the distortion corrected and uncorrected versions at life size.

First the corner, where the effect might be expected to be most significant:

And now at the rule of third intersection:

The effect is fairly subtle, and takes close comparison to see it. It’s not visible more centrally. Of course correction is optional: the distortion levels are nowhere near high enough to distort facial features or make a landscape visibly different. I don’t think I have enabled correction in any of sample images shown here. I generally only do it in architectural images, and this is not a lens I use often for that kind of purpose.

Flare

The flare control on the Batis is pretty impressive; much more so than the Batis 25mm 2.0 which came out at about the same time.

With the raw sun in the frame there is remarkably little veiling, and very little in the way of artefacts. It’s essentially prefect if the sun is centred, but as you place the sun off centre there is sometimes a very small blue artefact in the opposite corner of the frame.

Here’s an aperture series with the sun in the frame in the worst position, roughly outside the rule or thirds corner:

This is impressive performance.

An even more severe test is when you allow the raw sun to appear in the frame in an otherwise extremely dark environment, like a forest, then massively lift the shadows. This is the kind of test which makes the Batis 25 look terrible, and there was an internet meme about how the GM 24 [which has generally excellent flare performance] had bad flare performance because of a test like that, in which very few lenses can perform well.

So how does the Batis 85 go?

Here again, in the most difficult part of the frame.

F1.8 left, f5.6 right:

As you can see, again remarkable performance. At wide open there is a little more glare around the sun and some chroma error. There is only one significant artefact, and it is the very small green-blue blob, which would be very easy to edit out if needed. By f5.6 the area around the sun is better controlled, and the artefact is weaker but larger; instead of a small bright blob, it has become a slightly larger area of slight green overlay.

All in all, I’m not sure I’ve seen better.

Sunstars are another matter. As you can see, the lens does not really deliver well controlled sunstars, at least with the sun: the aperture mechanism is a nine very curved aperture system designed to give good results with slightly stopped down portraits. With specular lights like in cityscapes it gives better, 18 point sunstars like other Batis lenses, but, like them, they are nothing to write home about. Of course sunstars are a very subjective thing.

If you want impressive landscape sunstars at dawn or dusk there are no AF options that will do it: really the ZM 85 or Loxia 85 are the choices here, with 10 straight blades.

Alternatives

Sony GM 85mm f1.4:

Reviewed by Bastian here. This is the portrait lens with perhaps the best bokeh of any modern lens. It has remarkably little mechanical [optical] vignetting, and as a result less “swirl” wide open than anything else in it’s range. It also has a lovely SA-induced feel in the out of focus range. It’s just a touch less sharp wide open than, for example, the Sigma 85mm but it’s maybe worth it for the bokeh. By f1.8 it gets very sharp, and is as sharp as the Batis through most of the aperture range, though a touch less contrasty. It is expensive though, and for many people it is a bit large and heavy to double as a travel and portrait lens. The Batis focuses a lot faster.

Sony 85mm f1.8

Reviewed by Jannik here. Excellent inexpensive lens. Sharp and contrasty, but a bit less so than the Batis – and also holds its contrast in backlight a bit less well. It does have a button on the lens – before firmware 3 for the latest generation of Sony cameras this was a big deal, but now that eye-AF doesn’t require a button it’s still nice, but less important. It might focus just a touch faster, and it’s cheaper – but my choice would be the Batis if the extra price is not too much of a sacrifice.

Sigma Art 85mm f1.4

Optically impeccable, right up there with the Batis or perhaps a touch better still. Has a similar look wide open to the Batis, with a lot of contrast. It’s extremely big and heavy – much more so even than the GM and almost three times the weight of the Batis! I’d choose the GM if I wanted a big f1.4 portrait specialist. And if I just wanted sharp and contrasty for other purposes, I’d save weight and size with the Batis.

Samyang AF 85mm f1.4

I haven’t used this, so this is only report from trusted sources – do your own research. It looks like it’s very sharp, and has better AF than many Samyangs [though the latest firmware is thought by some to make it worse not better!]. Bokeh wide open is said to be quite good, though with rather a lot of swirl from cat’s eyes. Size and weight are surprisingly low for an f1.4 85mm lens. An interesting option, though the variation and reliability question mark which always hovers over Samyang might raise doubts. Again, I’d go either for the Batis for a lighter, general purpose short tele, or the GM for that lovely swirl free bokeh.

Zeiss Loxia 85mm f2.4

Reviewed By Bastian here. An impeccable lens, which can fill the same brief as the Batis as a general purpose travel/landscape/portrait 85mm. It’s one of the best lenses for the system, and the fact that the Batis really maintains contrast up to a similar level is a great tribute to it. For a small touch of extra quality with the Loxia, you lose a bit of speed, and lose AF which might be a deal breaker for portrait use for some. You gain lovely sunstars.

Zeiss Tele Tessar ZM 4/84

Reviewed by David [me] here. This is still my hiking landscape lens. It’s very small and light, great when you are taking days of food with you. And it has lovely sunstars. But I don’t take it travelling when I’m not hiking overnight. Having the faster apertures and AF, and being at least as sharp and contrasty stopped down, makes the Batis a better choice for this. The ZM also makes an especially great lens for hiking if you also have a big fast one like the GM85 for portraits [but then you still don’t have a do-it-all travel lens].

Legacy 85mm options

For the struggling student there are some cheaper options, even AF ones, that will do the job with some compromises. The old Canon EF 1.8/85 is not bad stopped down, and while a bit soft is fine for portraits wide open, is very cheap, and adapts easily. Any of the Canon 85mm 1.2 lenses provide a lovely soft look wide open, but they aren’t very sharp wide open by modern standards, and aren’t cheap either. FD is manual only, and the adapted AF [or indeed original AF] is very slow on the EF models. For someone who likes manual focus portrait work, the Zeiss Classic 1.4/85 has a distinctive look many find attractive.

Modern Adapted Manual Focus 85s

The Zeiss Otus 85 is probably still the standard bearer, though it’s price is absurd, and it really isn’t all that far ahead of many of these options [when I had the chance to compare it to the Loxia I found them almost indistinguishable at most apertures, except when the Loxia was wide open when the Otus, being stopped down, showed less cat’s-eye effect.] The Milvus 85 is said to be almost as good but cheaper. But probably neither really make sense to adapt and use unless you have them already. Mitakon make an 85mm f1.2 which is said not to be bad; and the Samyang Premium XP 1.2/85 might be interesting too, but none of us has tried it.

Conclusion

good

  • very sharp lens
  • extremely high contrast
  • light weight and reasonable size
  • excellent solid build quality
  • fast autofocus
  • great flare resistance for an 85
  • optical image stabilization
  • Excellent [though not class leading] CA correction average
  • high contrast bokeh
  • cat’s eyes at f1.8-2
  • price tag
  • non-Linear MF: some people like it, many do not. not good
  • Distortion a touch higher than typical for such a lens

Looking at the table above you might wonder: does he recommend the lens? Yes I do. It’s a very balanced choice, one that it is very easy to overlook for someone who reviews a lot of lenses. On the one hand we like to review lenses that are best in class: the absolute top resolution, or absolute most circular bokeh balls, or the most glorious precise mechanical construction with creamy brass helicoids, or perfectly apochromatic glass that makes us laugh at those lenses that Leica calls APO but still show spherochromatism. The Batis 85 is none of these things!

On the other hand we like to discover amazing bargains. Lenses which are super affordable, and yet still very high in quality – like the obvious competition here, the Sony 1.8/85 [or in a different focal length, the 7A 1.4/28]. The Batis is not that either. It’s not cheap for what it is, though not a rip off either.

Instead it’s the balanced choice: The choice made by someone not massively constrained by budget, and has particular use cases in mind. If you want a short tele prime lens with autofocus that is small and light enough to be pleasant to travel with, and which is fast enough to use for portraiture as well as landscape and general travel stuff it’s the best premium choice. The really fast bokeh monsters are too big. The Loxia doesn’t have AF. The Sony is a good choice: but the Batis is just a bit better for contrast and resolution and build. You pay a bit more, you get a bit more. Some might think its a dull formula. You aren’t paying to get any particular class leading feature. But you are paying to get, on average, the best set of compromises for someone who has this use case in mind.

I’ve had mine for three years now, and have never once been tempted to sell it, even though I have other 85mm lenses. It’s unassuming, but very useful, optically outstanding at its best, and nothing else quite matches its complete mix of properties. If you want just one solidly made 85mm lens, and aren’t interested in pairs of them [eg. GM85 and ZM, or Sigma and Loxia] it is likely the one to get.

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More Samples

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David Braddon-Mitchell is a keen landscape and environmental portrait photographer. In the last decade of film he was a darkroom practitioner and worked with Olympus OM SLRs and various medium format cameras. He switched to Canon DSLRs when digital imaging improved, and made a move to Sony bodies as soon as the A7 series was born. He enjoys using a mixture of legacy manual lenses, modern manual lenses, and E mount AF lenses.

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