Laowa Venus Optics Laowa 10mm f/4 Cookie Lens for Canon Review

The Laowa 10mm f/4 Cookie is a specialist's lens: incredibly small, manual focus, and perfect if you want a tiny ultra-wide for your Canon RF APS-C camera.

Focal Length 10mm
Max Aperture f/4
Mount Canon RF
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 130 g
Lens Type Ultra Wide-Angle
Laowa Venus Optics Laowa 10mm f/4 Cookie Lens for Canon lens
50 Puntuación global

The 30-Second Version

The Laowa 10mm f/4 Cookie is a unique, ultra-compact manual focus wide-angle prime for Canon RF APS-C cameras. It's great for keeping your kit small and for wide-angle macro, but the fixed f/4 aperture and manual focus limit its versatility. It's a niche lens for a specific need.

Overview

If you're a Canon RF APS-C shooter looking for a tiny, ultra-wide lens, the Laowa 10mm f/4 Cookie is basically the only option. It's a 10mm prime, which gives you a 16mm equivalent field of view on your camera, and it's designed specifically as a pancake lens. That means it's incredibly compact, weighing just 130 grams. People searching for 'compact wide angle lens for Canon' or 'RF pancake lens' will find this. It's a manual focus lens with a fixed f/4 aperture, so it's not trying to be a fast, autofocus zoom. It's priced around $299, which puts it in the budget ultra-wide category.

Performance

This lens is all about its optical design and physical size. Its optical performance lands in the 75th percentile, which is solid for a budget prime. The four ED glass elements and two aspherical elements help control distortion and chromatic aberration, which is crucial for a wide-angle. Our data shows it's particularly strong for macro, scoring in the 83rd percentile, thanks to that 4-inch minimum focus distance. But the fixed f/4 aperture means it's not a low-light champion, and its bokeh score is low, which makes sense for a wide-angle. You're getting sharp, corrected wide-angle shots, not creamy backgrounds.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.5
Bokeh 16.4
Build 97.4
Macro 83.8
Optical 76.7
Aperture 30.1
Versatility 37.4
Social Proof 5.7
Stabilization 38.3

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Extremely compact and lightweight (130g) 97th
  • Solid optical performance with good distortion control 84th
  • Excellent close-focus capability for wide-angle macro 77th
  • Simple, well-built manual focus design
  • Unique rectilinear pancake design for RF APS-C

Cons

  • Manual focus only (no autofocus) 6th
  • Fixed f/4 aperture limits low-light use 16th
  • Pronounced vignetting at wide apertures 30th
  • Not versatile for other types of photography
  • Limited social proof and reviews

The Word on the Street

0.0/5 (3 reviews)
👍 Buyers who value portability are thrilled with the lens's incredibly small size and weight.
👍 Users report the lens is well-built and offers surprisingly good sharpness and distortion control for its price.
👎 A common complaint is the noticeable vignetting when shooting at the f/4 aperture.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type Ultra Wide-Angle
Focal Length Min 10
Focal Length Max 10
Elements 12
Groups 8

Aperture

Max Aperture f/4
Min Aperture f/22
Diaphragm Blades 5

Build

Mount Canon RF
Format APS-C
Weight 0.1 kg / 0.3 lbs
Filter Thread 37

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 100
Max Magnification 1:6.67

Value & Pricing

At $299, it's a niche product with a clear value proposition. You're paying for the unique combination of ultra-wide angle and pancake size. There aren't many other RF APS-C lenses that offer a 16mm equivalent field of view in a package this small. If compact size is your top priority, it's worth the price. If you need autofocus or a brighter aperture, you'll need to look at zooms or standard primes, which will be bigger and likely more expensive.

Price History

250 JPY 300 JPY 350 JPY 400 JPY 450 JPY 16 mar18 mar22 mar 410 JPY

vs Competition

This lens doesn't really compete with the listed alternatives like the Viltrox 35mm or Meike 55mm, which are standard primes with autofocus and brighter apertures. For a true ultra-wide on RF APS-C, you'd typically look at a zoom like the Canon RF-S 10-18mm, which offers autofocus and a zoom range but is much larger. The Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8 for Sony is a completely different beast—a fast, versatile zoom. The Laowa Cookie's real competition is 'no lens at all' because it fills a specific size gap. If you need a tiny wide-angle, it's your pick. If you need features, you'll choose something else.

Common Questions

Q: Is the Laowa 10mm f/4 Cookie good for landscape photography?

Yes, its 16mm equivalent field of view and rectilinear design make it a solid choice for capturing wide landscapes, especially if you prioritize a compact kit.

Q: How does the Laowa 10mm compare to the Canon RF-S 10-18mm lens?

The Canon zoom has autofocus and a variable aperture, making it more versatile, but the Laowa Cookie is dramatically smaller and lighter, trading features for size.

Q: Can I use the Laowa 10mm f/4 Cookie for portraits?

It's not ideal. Our data scores it very low for portraits, as the wide angle and f/4 aperture don't create flattering perspective or subject isolation.

Q: Is this lens good for video?

Manual focus can be challenging for video, and the lack of stabilization means you'll need a stable platform or camera with good IBIS to get smooth shots.

Who Should Skip This

Skip this lens if you need autofocus for fast-moving subjects, shoot often in low light, or want a versatile lens for multiple types of photography. Portrait photographers should look at a standard prime. Event or sports shooters need autofocus. For a more versatile ultra-wide on RF APS-C, consider the Canon RF-S 10-18mm, even though it's bigger.

Verdict

Should you buy this? Only if you have a Canon RF APS-C camera and your absolute priority is having the smallest possible ultra-wide lens. It's a specialist tool. The manual focus and f/4 aperture mean it's not for fast action or low-light scenes. But for throwing in your bag for travel, architecture, or fun wide-angle macro shots, it's a clever little optic. If you need autofocus or a brighter lens, skip it.