Lensbaby Velvet 28mm f/2.5 Review
The Lensbaby Velvet 28mm is a creative tool first, with a 95th percentile macro score and a signature glow. Just don't expect a versatile, sharp everyday lens.
Overview
The Lensbaby Velvet 28mm f/2.5 is a weird lens, and it knows it. It's a 28mm prime that can focus down to 2 inches for a 1:2 macro shot, which puts its macro capability in the 95th percentile. That's wild for a wide-angle. But this isn't your standard sharp, clinical prime. Its whole deal is a soft, glowing effect wide open at f/2.5, a look you either love or you don't. It scores a 65 out of 100 overall, which tells you it's a specialist, not an all-rounder. Its travel score is a rough 36.9, so you're not throwing this in a bag for a casual walkaround.
Performance
Performance depends entirely on what you're after. If you want sharpness, look elsewhere—its optical score sits at the 58th percentile. But if you're chasing a specific dreamy, ethereal look for portraits or close-ups, this lens delivers. The bokeh quality lands in the 75th percentile, thanks in part to a 12-blade diaphragm that keeps things smooth even as you stop down. The trade-off is in the fundamentals: autofocus is right at the median (49th percentile), and there's no stabilization (42nd percentile). You're manually focusing this thing, which is part of the deliberate, hands-on experience.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Macro capability is elite, sitting in the 95th percentile with a 1:2 magnification ratio. 90th
- Creates a unique, soft-focus glow at f/2.5 that's hard to replicate digitally. 78th
- Bokeh quality is strong at the 75th percentile, aided by a 12-blade aperture. 72th
- Solid build quality for a creative lens, scoring in the 71st percentile. 65th
- Wide f/2.5 aperture is decently fast, landing in the 65th percentile.
Cons
- Very low versatility score (37th percentile); this is a one-trick pony.
- No image stabilization, which sits in the 42nd percentile.
- Autofocus performance is merely average, at the 49th percentile.
- Optical sharpness is below average, ranking in the 58th percentile.
- Heavy for a prime at 472g, and not weather-sealed.
Specifications
Full Specifications
Optics
| Focal Length Min | 28 |
| Focal Length Max | 28 |
| Elements | 8 |
| Groups | 7 |
Aperture
| Max Aperture | f/2.5 |
| Min Aperture | f/22 |
| Diaphragm Blades | 12 |
Build
| Mount | Nikon F |
| Format | Full-Frame |
| Weight | 0.5 kg / 1.0 lbs |
| Filter Thread | 67 |
Focus
| Min Focus Distance | 51 |
| Max Magnification | 1:2 |
Value & Pricing
At $650, the value proposition is narrow. You're not paying for sharpness or speed. You're paying for a specific, analog-style creative tool that does a glow effect and close-focusing exceptionally well. If that's your jam, it's arguably worth it because few lenses do this. If you just want a sharp 28mm prime, there are cheaper, better options. The price is all about the unique character.
vs Competition
Compared to a standard prime like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7, you're trading every practical metric for character. The Viltrox will be sharper, faster, and have autofocus. The Lensbaby gives you a look. Against a true travel zoom like the Panasonic 14-140mm, there's no contest in versatility—the Panasonic destroys it with a 37th percentile score. Even the Meike 55mm f/1.8 Pro offers better all-around optical performance and AF. The Lensbaby only wins if your priority is that soft-focus glow or its surprising macro chops.
Verdict
I can only recommend the Lensbaby Velvet 28mm if you already know you want its specific, dreamy look. The data is clear: it's a specialist with standout macro (95th percentile) and interesting bokeh (75th percentile), but it's weak everywhere else. For $650, that's a big ask. If you're a portrait or still-life shooter looking to add a unique, almost vintage texture to your work, it could be a fun tool. For anyone else, there are far more capable lenses for the money.