7Artisans 7Artisans 25mm f/0.95 Lens for Nikon Z Review

The 7Artisans 25mm f/0.95 delivers stunning bokeh and extreme low-light power for Nikon Z crop cameras, but only if you're willing to focus manually.

Focal Length 25mm
Max Aperture f/0.95
Mount Nikon Z
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 587 g
7Artisans 7Artisans 25mm f/0.95 Lens for Nikon Z lens
57.8 Totaalscore

The 30-Second Version

The 7Artisans 25mm f/0.95 is a manual focus gem for Nikon Z crop-sensor cameras. It offers an insane f/0.95 aperture for incredible low-light shots and dreamy bokeh, scoring in the 99th and 100th percentiles for those traits. At $215, it's a steal for its optical character, but you trade all autofocus and stabilization. Get it for creative portraits and low-light work, but look elsewhere for travel or action.

Overview

Let's talk about a lens that basically laughs at physics. The 7Artisans 25mm f/0.95 is a manual focus prime for Nikon Z APS-C cameras that gives you an absurdly wide aperture in a surprisingly compact package. For about $215, you're getting a 37.5mm equivalent field of view and the ability to shoot in near-darkness.

This lens is for the photographer who values character and creative control over convenience. It's perfect for portrait shooters looking for that dreamy, cinematic look, or anyone who enjoys the deliberate process of manual focusing. Our database shows it scores an 82/100 for portraits, which makes sense when you see the bokeh it produces.

What makes it interesting is the sheer ambition. f/0.95 on APS-C is rare, and doing it for this price is even rarer. You're buying into a specific experience: slowing down, nailing focus, and playing with the thinnest depth of field you can get on a crop sensor. It's not a do-everything lens, but for its niche, it's compelling.

Performance

The numbers tell a clear story. This lens sits in the 99th percentile for aperture speed. That f/0.95 rating isn't just for show; it lets in over twice as much light as a typical f/1.4 lens. In real terms, you can shoot handheld in a dimly lit cafe at ISO 800 where another lens would need ISO 3200 or a tripod. The trade-off is that sharpness wide open is good, not great—it lands in the 73rd percentile for optical quality. You'll get some softness and vignetting at f/0.95, but that's part of the character many buyers are after.

Where it truly shines is bokeh, scoring a perfect 100th percentile. The 13-blade diaphragm creates smooth, creamy out-of-focus areas that are exceptionally pleasing. The manual focus is smooth and precise, with a decently long throw that helps with accuracy. Just don't expect to track moving subjects; this is a lens for contemplative shooting.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.2
Bokeh 99.6
Build 63.2
Macro 68.5
Optical 75.9
Aperture 98.9
Versatility 37.3
Social Proof 5.5
Stabilization 37.5

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Unbeatable bokeh quality. The 13-blade aperture and f/0.95 design produce background blur that's in the 100th percentile, perfect for portraits. 100th
  • Extreme low-light capability. That f/0.95 aperture lets you shoot in conditions where other lenses fail, without cranking the ISO. 99th
  • Excellent build quality for the price. The all-metal construction feels solid and lands in the 60th percentile for build. 76th
  • Great close-focus performance. At 9.8 inches, it's surprisingly capable for detail shots, scoring in the 67th percentile for macro-like work. 69th
  • Incredible value for a unique look. At $215, you're getting a specialty tool that offers something autofocus lenses at triple the price often can't.

Cons

  • Manual focus only. This lands it in the 46th percentile for AF, which is a deal-breaker for fast-paced or video work. 6th
  • Soft wide open. While characterful, images at f/0.95 lack critical sharpness. You need to stop down to f/2 or so for best results.
  • Heavy for its size. At 587g, it's a chunk of metal that can make a small Z50 feel front-heavy.
  • No weather sealing. Combined with no stabilization (37th percentile), it's not an all-conditions lens.
  • Low social proof. With a 0/5 rating from just 5 reviews, it's a niche product without a strong track record of user satisfaction.

The Word on the Street

0.0/5 (5 reviews)
👍 Owners are consistently blown away by the lens's character, with many describing the bokeh and 'medium format look' as exceeding expectations for the price point.
👍 A common theme is that the lens feels like a premium product, with its solid all-metal build adding to the satisfying manual focus experience.
👎 The lack of autofocus is a recurring hurdle mentioned by users, noting it requires practice and patience, especially for video work.
🤔 Reviews acknowledge the softness at f/0.95 but often frame it as a desirable, cinematic trait rather than a pure optical flaw, accepting the trade-off for the unique look.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Focal Length Min 25
Focal Length Max 25
Elements 11
Groups 9

Aperture

Max Aperture f/0.95
Min Aperture f/16
Diaphragm Blades 13

Build

Mount Nikon Z
Format APS-C
Weight 0.6 kg / 1.3 lbs
Filter Thread 52

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 250

Value & Pricing

Here's the bottom line: for $215, you're buying a single, spectacular trick. The value is entirely in that f/0.95 aperture and the beautiful bokeh it creates. Compared to a first-party Nikon Z lens, you're getting a fraction of the features but a unique optical signature you can't find elsewhere at this price.

It undercuts almost every other ultra-fast prime by hundreds of dollars. The trade-off is manual everything. You're paying for glass and mechanics, not electronics or automation. If your goal is creative imagery on a budget, it's a steal. If you need reliable autofocus, look elsewhere.

C$ 295

vs Competition

The most direct competitor is the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7 AF for Z mount. It's a similar focal length (52.5mm equivalent) and price, but with autofocus. The trade-off is clear: you gain convenience but lose over a full stop of light and that magical bokeh. The Viltrox is the practical choice; the 7Artisans is the artist's choice.

Then there's the Nikon Z DX 16-50mm f/3.5-6.3 kit lens. It's smaller, lighter, has autofocus and stabilization, and is more versatile. But its aperture is tiny in comparison. You'd need to crank the ISO four stops higher to match the 7Artisans in low light. It's a lens for documenting life; the 7Artisans is for crafting images. For travel, the kit lens wins easily. For controlled portrait sessions, the 7Artisans is in another league.

Common Questions

Q: How hard is it to focus manually with this lens?

It's a dedicated manual focus lens with a smooth, damped focus ring and a focus throw long enough for precision. It's easier than adapting old lenses, but it still requires practice. For static subjects, it's fine. For anything moving, it's a challenge.

Q: Is it sharp enough for professional work?

It depends on the work. Wide open at f/0.95, it's soft and glowy—great for artistic portraits, bad for product photography. Stopped down to f/2.8, sharpness improves significantly. Our data puts its optical score in the 73rd percentile, meaning it's good, but not class-leading.

Q: Will this work on a full-frame Nikon Z camera?

No, it's designed for APS-C (DX) sensors only. On a full-frame Z5, Z6, or Z7, it will force crop mode, giving you roughly 10 megapixels on a Z6 II. You're better off with a lens designed for the full image circle.

Q: What's the catch? Why is it so cheap for f/0.95?

The catch is you're only paying for the glass and metal barrel. There's no autofocus motor, no electronics for communicating with the camera, no stabilization, and no weather sealing. All the cost is in the optical formula, which is a simpler, older design that prioritizes light gathering and bokeh over perfect sharpness.

Who Should Skip This

Travel photographers should steer clear. This lens scored a 31/100 in our travel category for good reason. It's heavy, has no stabilization for handheld video while walking, and manual focus is a hassle when you're trying to capture fleeting moments. You'd be much happier with Nikon's lightweight 16-50mm kit lens or the 28mm f/2.8 SE.

Also, anyone who shoots fast-moving subjects—sports, wildlife, active kids—should skip this. Manual focus at f/0.95 is a recipe for missed shots. Look at the Viltrox AF primes or the Nikon Z 24-70mm f/4 instead. Finally, pixel-peeping perfectionists might be disappointed by the softness wide open. If you need corner-to-corner sharpness at f/1.4, you need to spend much more.

Verdict

Buy this lens if you shoot on a Nikon Z APS-C camera (like a Z50 or Zfc) and you're obsessed with portrait photography, cinematic video, or low-light shooting. It's a tool that forces you to slow down and compose, and rewards you with a look that's hard to replicate. It's perfect for someone who already has a standard zoom or a nifty-fifty and wants to add something special to their bag.

Skip it if you need autofocus for chasing kids or pets, if you're primarily a travel photographer (it scores a dismal 31/100 there), or if you demand clinical sharpness wide open. Also, if you're new to manual focusing, the learning curve might frustrate you. In those cases, the Viltrox AF lenses or even adapting vintage glass might be better paths.