Brightin Star 10mm f/5.6 Fisheye 10mm

★★★★★ 5.0 (195)

The 172° field of view and 119g weight make this lens an ultralight, manual-focus fisheye that captures exaggerated wide-angle scenes. Its compact design and fixed f/5.6 aperture are suited for bright conditions or tripod-based long exposures, particularly for creative close-ups. This lens is best for experimental portrait photographers and astrophotography enthusiasts who value an extreme 15mm full-frame equivalent perspective over traditional landscape versatility.

Focal length 10mm
Aperture f/5.6
Mount Canon RF
Weight 119 g
af type manual focus only
lens type fisheye
Brightin Star 10mm f/5.6 Fisheye 10mm lens
59 종합 점수
가격 €0
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Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

The Brightin Star 10mm f/5.6 is a dirt-cheap manual focus fisheye for Nikon Z DX cameras. It's not sharp and it's not fast, but it's incredibly small, well-built, and delivers a 172° field of view for less than $80. Perfect as a creative sidekick for hobbyists who want to have fun with distortion. Skip it if you need clinical image quality or autofocus.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Ridiculously lightweight at 119g, it's barely there 98th
  • Build quality is oddly great for the price, all-metal and solid 92th
  • 172° field of view opens up creative framing you can't get otherwise 92th
  • Ultra-cheap entry into fisheye photography 81th
  • Manual focus ring has a nice, damped feel

Cons

  • Optical quality ranks near the bottom of all lenses we've tested
  • Fixed f/5.6 means you're stuck in bright light or using a tripod
  • No autofocus, and the small aperture makes focus peaking harder in dim conditions
  • No weather sealing, so be careful in dust or light rain
  • Not a versatile lens, it's a one-trick pony for specific effect shots

What owners think

The Word on the Street

5.0/5 (195 reviews)
👍 Many users love the tiny size and solid metal build, saying it's more substantial than expected for the price and perfect for throwing in a bag.
👍 The fun factor comes up repeatedly; owners enjoy the exaggerated perspective and find themselves using it for silly portraits and architecture experiments.
👎 A common gripe is the image softness, especially at the edges, and some wish for a faster aperture to make focusing and low-light use easier.
🤔 The manual focus experience splits users; some find it smooth and enjoyable, while newcomers to manual lenses feel it's tricky to nail focus at f/5.6.

시간에 따라 사용자 평판이 어떻게 변했는가

독점

고객이 실제로 리뷰를 작성한 시점을 기준으로 합니다. 초기의 호평이 유지되었는지 확인할 수 있습니다.

92/100당사 AI 감성 분석신뢰도 보통 · 18개 출처 · 2026년 5월
35Q4 '25Q1 '26
만족 (4-5★)불만족 (1-2★)막대 높이 = 리뷰 수

날짜가 있는 고객 리뷰 8건을 기준으로 달력 분기별로 묶었습니다. 기간별 분석은 영어로 제공됩니다.

The proof

Performance

Sharpness is not the point here, and that's a good thing because it's not sharp. Our optical quality percentile of 2nd is rock bottom, and that translates to soft edges, significant chromatic aberration, and a general glow when shooting wide open at f/5.6. But for a fisheye, especially one this cheap, that softness adds to the vintage, lo-fi vibe. If you stop down to f/8 or f/11, things improve a bit in the center, but the corners never really clean up. This is not a landscape lens for anyone who prints large.

The close focusing distance of 200mm lets you get weirdly intimate with subjects, and the 80th percentile macro ranking in our database suggests it's oddly capable for exaggerated close-ups. You can shove this lens right into a flower or a face and create some truly bizarre images. The manual focus ring has enough throw to be precise up close, and the deep depth of field at f/5.6 means nailing focus isn't all that hard. In bright daylight, you can pretty much set it to f/8, focus to a couple meters, and everything from a foot in front of you to infinity will be in acceptable focus.

Performance Percentiles

AF 14.6
Bokeh 64.3
Build 91.7
Macro 81.2
Optical 2
Aperture 64.5
User Sentiment 91.7
Versatility 34.1
Social Proof 98.2
Stabilization 35.9

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type fisheye
Focal Length Min 10
Focal Length Max 10
Elements 6
Groups 5

Aperture

Max Aperture f/5.6
Min Aperture 5.6
Constant Yes

Build

Mount Canon RF
Format APS-C
Weight 0.1 kg / 0.3 lbs

AF & Stabilization

AF Type manual focus only
Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 200

vs Competition

Standing next to the Viltrox AF 9mm f/2.8 E (which isn't a fisheye, but it's a close focal length) shows the trade-off. The Viltrox gives you autofocus, a much faster aperture, and much better optical quality, but you lose the wild 172° perspective and it costs significantly more. If you need a wide lens for vlogging or astrophotography, the Viltrox is the better pick. The Brightin Star is purely for fisheye enthusiasts who don't mind manual focus and slow glass.

Canon's EF-S 18-55mm kit lens, also in our competitor list, isn't even remotely comparable in focal length or purpose, it just happens to be in the same budget price category. The Meike 50mm f/1.8 is another cheap manual prime but again, totally different. The real competition for the Brightin Star is used Samyang or Rokinon fisheyes adapted to Z mount, but those are heavier, often larger, and might cost more once you factor in the adapter. So for a native Z mount, crop-sensor fisheye, this is pretty much it at this price.

Spec Brightin Star 10mm f/5.6 Fisheye 10mm Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm f/3.5-6.7 DC OS Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Nikon NIKKOR Z 28-400mm f/4-8 VR Panasonic LUMIX G Leica DG Vario-Elmarit H-ES50200 Canon EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM
Focal Length 10mm 16-300mm 18-300mm 28-400mm 50-200mm 18-135mm
Max Aperture f/5.6 f/3.5 f/3.5 f/4 f/2.8 f/3.5
Mount Canon RF Sony E Fuji X Nikon Z Micro Four Thirds Canon EF-S
Stabilization false true true true true true
Weather Sealed false true false true true false
Weight (g) 119 615 92 726 655 515
AF Type manual focus only HLA VXD linear motor STM linear motor STM
Lens Type fisheye zoom zoom zoom telephoto zoom
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AfBokehBuildMacroOpticalApertureUser SentimentVersatilitySocial ProofStabilization
Brightin Star 10mm f/5.6 Fisheye 10mm 14.664.391.781.2264.591.734.198.235.9
Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm f/3.5-6.7 DC OS Compare 54.984.658.385.998.977.5099.67899
Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Compare 98.275.596.487.874.377.530.399.283.181.1
Nikon NIKKOR Z 28-400mm f/4-8 VR Compare 86.678.450.881.29771.8098.983.198.2
Panasonic LUMIX G Leica DG Vario-Elmarit H-ES50200 Compare 98.286.454.622.895.984.191.788.365.996.3
Canon EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM Compare 86.675.546.633.279.877.50967892.5

Price

Value & Pricing

At $56 to $77, this lens is basically a no-brainer if you have any curiosity about fisheye photography. There's really nothing else at this price point that gives you a dedicated 10mm fisheye for Nikon Z DX. The closest competitor might be a lens from 7Artisans or Meike, but those tend to be faster (f/2.8) and more expensive. For about the cost of a couple of pizzas, you get a lens that's genuinely well-built and produces images that are fun to share. It's not a professional tool, but it's not priced like one.

If you're comparing value across vendors, the $56 end is probably used or from overseas sellers, while the $77 end is new with warranty. Either way, the price-to-fun ratio is off the charts. You could spend more on a Lensbaby or a vintage adapted fisheye and still not get this compact a package. For someone building out a Nikon Z DX kit on a budget, this is a brilliant little addition for the sheer creativity it unlocks.

Read more

Overview

The Brightin Star 10mm f/5.6 Fisheye is one of those lenses that makes you remember why photography is fun. It's tiny, manual focus only, and it turns everything into a bizarre, spherical world. At 119 grams, you'll forget it's in your bag until you want to turn a boring street corner into a surreal landscape. This lens isn't for pixel peepers or anyone chasing clinical sharpness, it's for people who want to experiment with a 172° field of view without dropping a ton of cash.

It's built for Nikon Z DX shooters who don't mind slowing down. The fixed f/5.6 aperture might sound limiting, but for a fisheye it actually makes sense. You're usually stopping down anyway to keep the whole exaggerated frame in focus, so the slow aperture just keeps the design simple and affordable. And at the $56 to $77 price bracket we're seeing across vendors, it's almost an impulse buy. The optical quality sits at the 2nd percentile across all lenses in our database, which is terrible on paper, but that's part of the charm here. This lens embraces distortion, soft corners, and character over perfection.

We've seen a lot of high-end glass come through our review process, and sometimes it's refreshing to play with something that doesn't take itself too seriously. The Brightin Star 10mm has a sturdy, all-metal build that landed in the 90th percentile for build quality, oddly enough. It feels solid in the hand, the focus ring is damped nicely, and it's genuinely fun to use on a walk around town. Just don't hand it to someone who's never used manual focus and expect them to nail the shot.

Common Questions

Q: Is this lens autofocus or manual only?

Totally manual focus. There's no electronics in the lens at all, so your camera won't even know it's attached. You'll need to set focus peaking on your Nikon Z body to help, and since the aperture is fixed at f/5.6, the depth of field is deep enough that zone focusing works well for most daylight shots.

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

It's designed for APS-C (DX) sensors, so mounting it on a full-frame Z camera will probably get you heavy vignetting in the form of a circular image. Some shooters like that for a creative tunnel effect, but if you want a full fisheye on full frame, this won't deliver. It'll likely force your camera into DX crop mode automatically, reducing resolution.

Q: Can I use filters with this fisheye lens?

No, the front element bulges out significantly, so standard screw-on filters won't fit. If you need ND for video in bright light, you're out of luck unless you rig up a matte box system. But honestly, at f/5.6 and intended use, filters aren't a big deal for most people.

Q: How does it compare to a modern smartphone's ultrawide camera?

It's completely different. Smartphones use software to correct distortion, giving you a rectilinear look. This lens leans into extreme barrel distortion, bending straight lines into wild curves. If you want that aggressive fisheye look you can't fake in an app, this lens does it optically. If you just want a wide shot without distortion, use your phone or a normal wide lens.

Who Should Skip This

Landscape photographers who need edge-to-edge sharpness should absolutely look elsewhere. The 2nd percentile optical quality means even stopped down, the corners are mushy and chromatic aberration is rampant. For big prints of sweeping vistas, this lens will disappoint. Instead, consider the Viltrox 9mm f/2.8 or even the Nikon Z DX 12-28mm PZ for a rectilinear wide option. Also, anyone who hates manual focus or needs fast, reactive shooting should skip this; the slow aperture and lack of AF make it a non-starter for event work or fast-moving wildlife.

Verdict

If you're a Nikon Z DX shooter who wants to mess around with extreme wide-angle distortion and doesn't mind manual focus, get this lens. It's cheap, built well, and produces images that will make your friends ask how you did that. Pair it with a Z fc or Z50 and you've got a compact walkaround setup that's just plain fun. It also works for creative portraits where you want an exaggerated, comedic look.

Skip it if you need a lens for serious landscape work, though. The optical shortcomings and inability to use filters mean you'll be fighting softness in every shot. For real estate or architectural photography, you'd be better off with a rectilinear ultrawide that corrects distortion. And if you've never used manual focus before, the learning curve plus the slow aperture might frustrate you in low light. This is a secondary creative lens, not a daily driver.

Usage Scores

Macro (50.1)Overall (58.5)Budget (44.1)Street (44.7)Travel (39.9)Portrait (46.8)Landscape (23.4)Professional (39)Video Cinema (39.9)Wildlife Sports (28.4)

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