Review Fuji 90mm f/2.0 Real world Review

90mm fuji review

Real world review of the Fuji 90mm f/2.0

The lens that was too perfect.

I wanted to love this 90mm so bad. It performed extremely well – yet, I returned it.

UPDATE: This review has been VERY controversial! I was not able to convey the message in the first edition of this blog post: what I meant is that some lenses are too clinical for my style, too boring. This is very subjective to the photographer of course. I only used 60+ lenses in my life from Olympus, Nikon, Canon and Fuji: I don’t know much. So take my opinion with a grain of salt :)

Might as well pick up a cheap Nikon DSLR and throw a 85mm f/1.8 on it. No, seriously. I wanted to love that lens: and I did, when it came to image quality. It’s just…it’s just that the focus hunts too much on a Fuji X-Pro2. I got way better performance with my D300 and a 85mm f/1.8: for nearly half the cost.

Many of my readers start to understand: we love the good deals at The Most Beautiful World. Value over gimmicks.


The bokeh is beautiful – truly is.

The bokeh is beautiful – truly is.


Home.

Home.

View from work.

View from work.

Best friend.

Best friend.


You know, I feel that after having shot for fun with a Otus 55mm f1.4 on a Nikon D4 of a friend in Singapore, everything is lacking thereafter. A younger version of myself would have written: “The 90mm is phenomenal!”. But I’m older and wiser, and more… jaded. And so while this lens is great, it isn’t the pinnacle of optics. Don’t worry: it’s good enough for 99% for the majority of the users. I’m just not satisfied with anything but the best.

Rest reassured. The bokeh of the 90mm is great.

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It’s super sharp!

Yep, goes in the rain!

Yep, goes in the rain!

At minimal focusing distance.

Sister always willing to do a photoshoot.

Sister always willing to do a photoshoot.

The build quality is solid, nothing to complain.

The autofocus is quick but slower than the 16-55mm f/2.8 Fuji (reviewed here). The autofocus is not the best and I would not feel comfortable shooting a wedding with this lens. There, I said it. I would rather have a Nikon or Canon body with an 85mm f/1.4 or 105mm f/2.8 macro than a Fuji + 90mm f/2 as a second body at a wedding.

It’s sharp. Super sharp.

It is also a beautiful lens… Look, this lens is definitely a gem when it comes to sharpness and optical quality. It focuses super close too! It’s just not good enough for me: I was blessed to try better combo than this lens + X-Pro2.

This is the lens you get if you are locked into the Fuji system and don’t want another body. Or… do you get the 50-140mm f/2.8?

Well, I haven’t tried the 50-140mm, so I can’t talk about that lens. 

One quick point: the fact that the 90mm f/2.0 is NOT stabilized is a major hurdle if you want to use this lens in the evenings or at events inside a building. You need to always shoot over 1/125 if you want to make sure that your image is tack sharp, even maybe 1/200. This is no joke and not fun with an X-Pro2 (click for review). With the X-H1 is would be different. 

Buy it from a store that allows you to return it and try it for yourself, that’s my best advice.

If you hesitate between the 56mm f/1.2 vs the 90mm f/2.0, I would take the 56mm any day. There’s more charm in the 56mm, more “magic”. Photography is an art, not a science.

Cheers,

JP

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