Laowa Venus Optics Laowa Argus 35mm f/0.95 FF Lens for Review

The Laowa Argus 35mm f/0.95 creates magical bokeh and sucks in light like a black hole, but it demands you work for it with manual focus and accepts some softness wide open.

Focal Length 35mm
Max Aperture f/0.95
Mount Canon RF
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 754 g
Laowa Venus Optics Laowa Argus 35mm f/0.95 FF Lens for lens
58.9 Punteggio Complessivo

The 30-Second Version

The Laowa Argus 35mm f/0.95 delivers breathtaking bokeh and extreme low-light ability, but only if you're okay with manual focus and soft images wide open. It's a specialist's dream, not an everyday lens. Worth it for creatives who need that specific look.

Overview

The Laowa Argus 35mm f/0.95 is a lens that knows exactly what it is. It's a specialist's tool, built for one thing and one thing only: creating images with an absolutely insane amount of light and a dreamy, cinematic look. Forget autofocus, forget weather sealing, forget a compact size. This lens is about that f/0.95 aperture and the unique character it brings.

That character comes at a cost, both in dollars and in handling. At 754g, it's a chunky piece of glass, and you'll be focusing manually for every shot. But if you're a portrait shooter, a filmmaker, or anyone who values bokeh and low-light capability above all else, this lens presents a very compelling argument.

Performance

Let's be clear: the performance story here is all about that f/0.95 aperture. Our data puts its bokeh quality in the 100th percentile—it's literally the best we've measured. The optical quality is solid, landing in the 82nd percentile, which is impressive for such a fast lens. The trade-off is sharpness wide open; it's soft, which is exactly what the customer reviews and the engineering challenge suggest. Stop it down to f/2 or f/2.8, and it cleans up nicely. It's not a versatile performer, but in its specific lane, it's exceptional.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.3
Bokeh 99.9
Build 24.4
Macro 53.4
Optical 83.6
Aperture 98.9
Versatility 37.5
Social Proof 12.1
Stabilization 37.9

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • The f/0.95 aperture creates truly stunning, creamy bokeh. 100th
  • Optical quality is excellent for such an extreme design. 99th
  • Build feels solid with a smooth manual focus ring. 84th
  • The selectable clicked/de-clicked aperture ring is great for video.

Cons

  • It's strictly manual focus, which isn't for everyone. 12th
  • Images are noticeably soft when shot wide open at f/0.95. 24th
  • At 754g, it's a heavy and bulky lens to carry.
  • No weather sealing means you have to baby it.

The Word on the Street

0.0/5 (4 reviews)
👍 Users are consistently blown away by the unique, creamy bokeh and the sheer engineering of an f/0.95 lens at this price.
🤔 Many acknowledge the expected softness at f/0.95 as a trade-off for the character, not necessarily a flaw, but it's a noted limitation.
👎 The weight and bulk of the lens is a common point of criticism for those hoping to use it for anything beyond a studio setting.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Focal Length Min 35
Focal Length Max 35
Elements 14
Groups 9

Aperture

Max Aperture f/0.95
Min Aperture f/16
Diaphragm Blades 15

Build

Mount Canon RF
Format Full-Frame
Weight 0.8 kg / 1.7 lbs
Filter Thread 72

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 500
Max Magnification 1:10

Value & Pricing

At $649, the value proposition is a bit of a tightrope walk. You're getting an optical feat—a full-frame f/0.95 lens—for hundreds less than the legendary (and also manual) Voigtländers or the astronomical-price autofocus options from Zeiss. But you're also giving up autofocus and any pretense of being an all-rounder. If you need that specific look and don't mind manual operation, it's a steal. If you just want a good 35mm lens, your money goes further elsewhere.

Price History

600 BRL 700 BRL 800 BRL 900 BRL 1.000 BRL 1.100 BRL 1.200 BRL 16 mar22 mar25 mar29 mar29 mar 1.065 BRL

vs Competition

This lens exists in a weird, wonderful niche. Compared to the popular Viltrox 35mm f/1.7 for Z-mount, you're trading autofocus, sharpness wide open, and a lighter build for that extra stop and a half of light and arguably more characterful bokeh. Against a workhorse like the Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8, there's no contest in versatility—the Tamron wins. But the Tamron can't touch the Laowa's low-light or background separation. Your choice is between a versatile, sharp tool and a single-minded artist's brush.

Common Questions

Q: Is the softness at f/0.95 a deal-breaker?

Not if you know what you're buying. It's an expected characteristic of such a fast lens, and it actually contributes to the dreamy portrait look. For critical sharpness, you'll need to stop down to at least f/2.

Q: Can I use this for video?

Absolutely, and it's a strength. The de-clicked aperture ring allows for silent exposure changes, and the manual focus is smooth and precise, which filmmakers often prefer.

Q: How does it handle in low light?

The f/0.95 aperture is its superpower. It gathers an enormous amount of light, allowing you to shoot in very dark conditions at lower ISOs than with any f/1.4 or f/1.8 lens.

Who Should Skip This

If you need reliable autofocus for chasing kids, pets, or sports, skip this immediately. It's a manual-only lens, and that's a dealbreaker for fast-paced work. Also, if you're a traveler who values a light kit, look at a compact f/1.8 or f/2 lens instead—this 754g brick will weigh you down.

Verdict

Buy the Laowa Argus 35mm f/0.95 if you're a portrait photographer, indie filmmaker, or creative shooter who lives for shallow depth of field and has the patience for manual focus. It's a lens that will force you to slow down and compose, and it rewards that effort with a look that's hard to replicate. Just don't expect it to be your walk-around lens.