7Artisans 7artisans 24mm T2.1 Infinte Series Professional Review
The 7Artisans 24mm T2.1 is a 2.2-pound cine lens that excels at macro but feels cheap and offers mediocre general optics. It's a niche tool, not a versatile workhorse.
Overview
The 7Artisans 24mm T2.1 is a weird, heavy, and surprisingly niche lens. The one thing you need to know is that it's built like a tank for a very specific job: controlled, manual-focus cinema work on a budget. It's not a lens you'd casually throw in your bag. It's a 2.2-pound piece of glass that demands a rig and a plan.
Performance
What surprised me is how the performance splits down the middle. For macro work, it's shockingly good, landing in the 93rd percentile. Get up close, and the details are crisp. But for general optical quality and that dreamy bokeh you might expect from a fast prime? It's mediocre, sitting in the bottom third. The image stabilization is excellent (90th percentile), which is a huge plus for handheld video, but that's about where the 'wow' factor ends.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Exceptional close-focus/macro capability for a cine lens. 91th
- Built-in image stabilization works very well. 88th
- Solid control over focus breathing for smooth rack focuses.
- T2.1 aperture lets in a good amount of light for the price.
Cons
- It's a brick. At nearly 1000g, it's wildly heavy for a 24mm prime. 5th
- Build quality feels cheap for the weight (5th percentile). 27th
- General optical performance is just okay, not great. 30th
- No weather sealing, autofocus, or versatility. It does one thing.
Specifications
Full Specifications
Optics
| Focal Length Min | 24 |
| Focal Length Max | 24 |
Build
| Mount | Canon EF |
| Weight | 1.0 kg / 2.2 lbs |
AF & Stabilization
| Stabilization | Yes |
Focus
| Min Focus Distance | 44 |
Value & Pricing
At $799, it's a tough sell. You're paying for the cinema-specific features like geared focus rings and focus breathing control, not for stunning image quality. If you need those cine features on a tight budget, it has a place. For everyone else, it's overpriced and underwhelming.
Price History
vs Competition
Don't confuse this with the Viltrox or Meike lenses in the competitor list. Those are lightweight, autofocus stills lenses you can actually walk around with. The 7Artisans is the opposite. A more direct, though more expensive, competitor would be something like a used Rokinon Cine DS. You trade some weight for much better build quality and similar optical performance. For hybrid shooters, the Nikon Z 35mm f/1.8 S, while a different focal length, is in another league optically and is far more versatile, even without dedicated cine features.
| Spec | 7Artisans 7artisans 24mm T2.1 Infinte Series Professional | Meike Meike 50mm F1.8 Full Frame AF STM Lens Standard | Nikon Nikon S-Line Nikon NIKKOR Z 24-70mm f/2.8 S II Lens (Nikon Z) | Canon Canon RF 24mm f/1.8 Macro IS STM Lens | Tamron Tamron Di III Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8 Di III-A VC RXD Lens for Sony | Sigma Sigma Contemporary Sigma 16-300mm f/3.5-6.7 DC OS Contemporary Lens |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Focal Length | 24mm | 50mm | 24-70mm | 24mm | 17-70mm | 16-300mm |
| Max Aperture | - | f/1.8 | f/2.8 | f/1.8 | f/2.8 | f/3.5 |
| Mount | Canon EF | Nikon Z | Nikon Z | Canon RF | Sony E Mount | Sony E |
| Stabilization | true | true | true | true | true | true |
| Weather Sealed | false | false | true | false | false | false |
| Weight (g) | 998 | 301 | 676 | 269 | 544 | 615 |
| AF Type | - | STM | Autofocus | Autofocus | Autofocus | Autofocus |
| Lens Type | - | - | Zoom | Zoom | Zoom | Zoom |
Verdict
This is not a general-purpose lens. I can only recommend it to a very specific user: a filmmaker on a strict budget who needs a fully manual, parfocal-ish cine lens for a rigged-up camera and values macro capability. For 99% of shooters, even serious videographers, a good stills prime adapted for video will be lighter, sharper, and more useful. Skip it unless your gear list specifically calls for a 'heavy, manual 24mm T2.1 cine lens' and nothing else will do.