Laowa Venus Optics Laowa 15mm f/4.5 Macro Lens (Nikon F) Review
The Laowa 15mm f/4.5 Macro does one incredibly weird thing no other lens can. Here's who should buy it, and who will regret it.
Overview
The Laowa 15mm f/4.5 Macro is a weird, wonderful, and incredibly specific tool. It's a full-frame wide-angle lens that can focus down to 36mm for 1:2 macro shots, which is a combination you just don't see. The one thing you need to know? This isn't a general-purpose lens. It's a manual-focus, manual-aperture specialist designed for one very cool trick: extreme close-ups with a huge field of view. If you're shooting bugs, tiny textures, or surreal product shots where context matters, this lens opens up a world you can't get into with anything else.
Performance
What surprised me is how sharp it is. For such a niche design, the optical quality is seriously impressive, landing in the 90th percentile. The 1:2 macro capability on a 15mm lens is its party trick, and it delivers. You can get your front element almost touching your subject and still have the background in the frame, which creates a unique, immersive perspective that standard macro lenses can't match. Just don't expect it to be fast or easy to use for anything else.
Pros & Cons
Pros
- Unique 15mm focal length with true 1:2 macro capability. 92th
- Excellent sharpness and optical quality for its design. 91th
- Compact and lightweight at just 309g. 86th
- Surprisingly good build quality for a manual lens.
Cons
- Manual focus and aperture only. No autofocus, period. 6th
- Slow f/4.5 max aperture limits low-light use. 15th
- Not versatile. Terrible for portraits or general walkaround. 20th
- Five-blade diaphragm can create harsh bokeh when you do get it.
Specifications
Full Specifications
Optics
| Focal Length Min | 15 |
| Focal Length Max | 15 |
| Elements | 16 |
| Groups | 11 |
Aperture
| Max Aperture | f/4.5 |
| Min Aperture | f/32 |
| Diaphragm Blades | 5 |
Build
| Mount | Nikon F |
| Format | Full-Frame |
| Weight | 0.3 kg / 0.7 lbs |
| Filter Thread | 62 |
AF & Stabilization
| Stabilization | No |
Focus
| Min Focus Distance | 36 |
| Max Magnification | 1:2 |
Value & Pricing
At $399, it's a fair price for the unique capability it offers. You're not paying for convenience or speed, you're paying for optical access to a perspective that's otherwise impossible. If you need what it does, it's worth every penny. If you don't, it's a paperweight.
Price History
vs Competition
Don't compare this to autofocus primes like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7 or Meike 55mm f/1.8. Those are general-purpose lenses. This Laowa has no direct competitor. The real question is whether you need its specific superpower. For traditional macro work, a dedicated 100mm macro lens will be easier to use. For wide-angle shots, a faster autofocus lens like a 20mm f/1.8 will be more practical. This lens exists in the narrow space between them.
| Spec | Laowa Venus Optics Laowa 15mm f/4.5 Macro Lens (Nikon F) | Meike Meike 55mm F1.4 Standard Aperture APS-C Frame AF | 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 | Sirui Sirui Sniper 56mm f/1.2 Autofocus Lens (Sony E, |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Focal Length | 15mm | 55mm | 24-70mm | 24mm | 17-70mm | 56mm |
| Max Aperture | f/4.5 | f/1.4 | f/2.8 | f/1.8 | f/2.8 | f/1.2 |
| Mount | Nikon F | Nikon Z | Nikon Z | Canon RF | Sony E Mount | Sony E |
| Stabilization | false | true | true | true | true | true |
| Weather Sealed | false | false | true | false | false | false |
| Weight (g) | 309 | 281 | 676 | 269 | 544 | 422 |
| AF Type | - | STM | Autofocus | Autofocus | Autofocus | Autofocus |
| Lens Type | - | - | Zoom | Zoom | Zoom | - |
Verdict
This is a buy-for-a-specific-project lens, not an everyday carry. If you're a macro enthusiast bored of the usual close-ups, a product photographer needing wild perspectives, or a creative pro looking for a new visual tool, get it. Its unique capability justifies its limitations. For everyone else, even as a curious second lens, it's too specialized to recommend. It's brilliantly weird, but only useful if your photography is too.