Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x NA0.5 Supermicro APO Review
The Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x turns your camera into a microscope. We tested it to see if this $1,500 supermacro tool is a breakthrough or just too specialized for practical use.
The 30-Second Version
The Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x NA0.5 is a specialized supermicro lens that turns your Canon EF camera into a microscope. It offers incredible 10x to 50x magnification with APO correction, but its fixed f/10 aperture and manual-only operation make it a tool for very specific professional or scientific use, not general photography.
Overview
If you're looking to photograph things invisible to the naked eye, the Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x isn't just another macro lens. It's a microscope objective that mounts directly to your Canon EF camera, offering insane magnification levels from 10x all the way up to 50x. With a fixed f/10 aperture and a manual focus-only design, this is a specialized tool for scientists, forensic analysts, or artists who want to explore the microscopic world. At around $1,500, it's a significant investment for a very specific type of photography.
Performance
This isn't a lens you judge by typical photo benchmarks. Its performance is all about magnification and resolving power. The included 10x, 20x, 35x, and 50x tubes let you swap magnification without recalibration, which is a huge plus for workflow. The APO (apochromatic) design does a solid job minimizing color fringing, which is critical at these scales. Our data puts its optical performance in the 35th percentile versus all lenses, but that's a bit misleading. Compared to other supermacro tools, it delivers the sharp, flat-field images you need. Just remember, at f/10, you'll need a lot of light and a very stable tripod.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Unmatched 10x to 50x magnification range for a camera-mounted system. 67th
- APO design effectively controls chromatic aberration at high magnifications.
- Interchangeable tubes make switching magnification quick and easy.
- Compact and relatively lightweight for what it does at 390g.
- Fixed 20mm working distance simplifies lighting setups.
Cons
- Fixed f/10 aperture requires intense, controlled lighting. 12th
- Manual focus only, with a very shallow depth of field. 14th
- Not versatile at all; useless for anything but supermacro. 21th
- No image stabilization, making a rock-solid platform essential.
- Our database shows it scores poorly for general macro use (18th percentile).
Specifications
Full Specifications
Optics
| Type | Ultra Wide-Angle |
Aperture
| Max Aperture | f/10 |
| Diaphragm Blades | 9 |
Build
| Mount | Canon EF Mount |
| Weight | 0.4 kg / 0.9 lbs |
AF & Stabilization
| Stabilization | No |
Focus
| Max Magnification | 50x |
Value & Pricing
At $1,499, the value question is simple: do you need to see at 50x? If you do, there aren't many consumer-friendly alternatives that mount directly to a DSLR or mirrorless camera. For general macro work, even extreme macro at 5:1, a dedicated macro lens is a far better and more versatile value. This lens is priced for its niche capability, not for broad appeal.
vs Competition
This lens exists in its own category, but let's look at what you give up. The Meike 55mm F1.8 is a standard prime with autofocus and a wide aperture for portraits and low light—it's for completely different photography. The Viltrox 35mm F1.7 is a fast, affordable wide-angle. Even Canon's own RF 28-70mm f/2.8, while a workhorse zoom, can't get close to 1:1 magnification. The key trade-off is versatility. Buying the Laowa Aurogon means buying a tool that does one spectacular, hyper-specific thing and nothing else. A traditional macro lens like the Laowa 100mm 2x Ultra Macro APO would be a more flexible alternative for most people.
Common Questions
Q: Is the Laowa Aurogon good for regular macro photography?
No, it's overkill and impractical. Our data ranks it in the 18th percentile for macro versatility. For standard macro work (1:1 to 5:1 magnification), a dedicated macro lens is a much better choice.
Q: Can I use the Laowa Aurogon for portraits or landscapes?
Absolutely not. With a fixed f/10 aperture, 10-50x magnification, and manual focus, it's useless for general photography. Our scores show it's among the weakest lenses for travel (24/100) and landscape (23.6/100).
Q: What kind of camera setup do I need for this lens?
You'll need a Canon EF mount camera (or an adapter), an extremely stable tripod, and powerful, controlled lighting to combat the dark f/10 aperture. A focusing rail is also highly recommended for precise manual focus.
Q: How does the Laowa Aurogon compare to a microscope?
It's essentially a high-quality microscope objective that uses your camera as the eyepiece and sensor. The main advantage is direct digital capture and the ability to use interchangeable magnification tubes without realigning your subject.
Who Should Skip This
Skip this lens if you're a hobbyist photographer, a general macro shooter, or anyone looking for a versatile lens. It's not for portraits, landscapes, travel, or even standard close-up work. If you want to photograph insects, flowers, or products, a true 1:1 macro lens will serve you far better. Also, if you rely on autofocus or shoot handheld, this isn't for you. It demands a technical, tripod-bound workflow.
Verdict
Should you buy the Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x? Only if your job or passion absolutely requires photographing subjects at 10x to 50x magnification. It's a brilliant, purpose-built instrument for scientific imaging, forensic documentation, or microscopic art projects. For everyone else—even serious macro shooters—this lens is overkill and frustratingly limited. You'll fight with light, focus, and stability for results you probably don't need. For extreme macro, a high-quality 1x-5x macro setup will be more practical and yield more keepers.