TTArtisan Fujinon XF TTArtisan 27mm F2.8 f/2.8 XF-Mount Auto Focus Review

The TTArtisan 27mm F2.8 packs impressive autofocus into a tiny, affordable package for Fujifilm shooters, but image quality is just okay.

Focal Length 27mm
Max Aperture f/2.8
Mount Fujifilm X
Stabilization Yes
Weather Sealed No
Weight 150 g
AF Type STM
TTArtisan Fujinon XF TTArtisan 27mm F2.8 f/2.8 XF-Mount Auto Focus lens
83.6 综合评分

Overview

If you're a Fujifilm shooter looking for a tiny, affordable prime lens, the TTArtisan 27mm F2.8 is a name you've probably seen. It's a 27mm pancake lens (that's about a 40mm equivalent on a full-frame camera), and it's designed to be a super compact, everyday carry option for your X-mount camera. At around $160, it's one of the cheapest autofocus lenses you can get for the system. People often ask, 'is there a good, cheap autofocus lens for Fujifilm?' and this is one of the main answers. It's got a fast STM motor, eye-detection AF, and even in-body stabilization support, which is pretty wild for the price. It's not the fastest lens at f/2.8, but for street photography, casual portraits, and just having something light on your camera, it's a compelling little package.

Performance

Where this lens really punches above its weight is in autofocus. Its AF performance lands in the 96th percentile, which is genuinely impressive. The STM motor is quiet and smooth, and the eye-detection AF works reliably for portraits. The stabilization is also solid, sitting in the 89th percentile, so you can handhold slower shutter speeds on bodies like the X-S10 or X-H2. Now, the optical performance is where you feel the price. It ranks in the 33rd percentile for optics, meaning sharpness and rendering aren't its strong suit, especially wide open. It's perfectly fine for social media or small prints, but don't expect clinical detail. For macro work, it scores surprisingly high (96th percentile), thanks to its close minimum focus distance, but its weakest area is landscapes (52nd percentile), where corner sharpness and distortion can be more noticeable.

Performance Percentiles

AF 95.8
Bokeh 48.4
Build 95.6
Macro 95.5
Optical 35.7
Aperture 54.8
Versatility 37.4
Social Proof 85.2
Stabilization 88.1

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Incredibly compact and lightweight at 150g 96th
  • Autofocus performance is excellent and includes eye-detection 96th
  • Very affordable at around $160 96th
  • Includes useful stabilization support 88th
  • Unique USB-C firmware upgrade port on the lens cap

Cons

  • Optical performance is just okay, not super sharp
  • F2.8 aperture isn't great for low light or shallow depth of field
  • Not weather-sealed
  • Bokeh quality is mediocre (47th percentile)
  • Click aperture ring might be a pro or con depending on your preference

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Focal Length Min 27
Focal Length Max 27

Aperture

Max Aperture f/2.8

Build

Mount Fujifilm X
Weight 0.1 kg / 0.3 lbs

AF & Stabilization

AF Type STM
Stabilization Yes

Focus

Min Focus Distance 27

Value & Pricing

At $160, the value proposition is simple: you're paying for autofocus and compact size, not optical perfection. It's a fraction of the cost of Fujifilm's own XF 27mm F2.8 WR, which is sharper and weather-sealed but also more than twice the price. If your main goal is to have a tiny, discreet lens that can focus quickly on faces, this is a steal. If you care more about ultimate image quality, you'll need to spend more.

Price History

$140 $160 $180 $200 $220 Mar 6Mar 22 $205

vs Competition

The most direct competitor is Fujifilm's own XF 27mm F2.8 WR. The Fuji lens is sharper, has better build quality, and is weather-sealed, but it costs over $400. You're paying a big premium for that Fuji polish. The Viltrox 35mm F1.7 is another popular budget option. It's not a pancake, but it gives you a faster F1.7 aperture for better low light and bokeh, though its autofocus might not be as snappy. For a similar price, the Meike 55mm F1.8 offers a short-telephoto perspective and a faster aperture, making it better for portraits, but it's much larger. The TTArtisan's main trick is staying so small you might forget it's on your camera.

Verdict

So, should you buy the TTArtisan 27mm F2.8? If you want the smallest possible autofocus lens for your Fuji and you're on a tight budget, absolutely. It's a fantastic 'always-on' lens for street or travel where size is everything. But if you're asking 'is this the sharpest lens I can get?' or 'is this good for low light?', the answer is no. You buy this for its form factor and competent autofocus, and you accept the optical compromises. For many shooters, that's a trade worth making.