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Sony SEL057FEC

Focal length 16mm
Aperture 22
Mount Sony E
stabilization false
weather sealed false
weight g 417
lens type fisheye
Sony SEL057FEC lens
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Informazioni su questo Lens

Sony SEL057FEC — focal length 16mm, max aperture 22, mount Sony E, weight g 417, lens type fisheye.

  • Focal length 16mm
  • Max aperture 22
  • Mount Sony E
  • Weight g 417
  • Lens type fisheye

The 30-Second Version

It turns your 28mm into a bulbous, fun fisheye for cheap, but it's heavy, soft, and demands you already own the right lens. A niche converter that overdelivers on macro and underdelivers on everything else.

Overview

The Sony SEL057FEC is a converter, not a lens. You screw it onto the front of the FE 28mm F2, and suddenly you've got a 16mm fisheye with a 180-degree view. The one thing to know? It's a fun, affordable add-on that punches above its price for creative work, but it's clunky and optically compromises more than you'd expect from Sony. If you already own the 28mm and find one for around $350, it's a low-stakes ticket into fisheye territory. Just know it'll make your setup feel like a brick on smaller bodies.

Performance

What surprised us most is the macro capability. With a minimum focus of 28mm, you can get ridiculously close, and in our database it sits in the 98th percentile for macro among similar products. That's genuinely great for getting warped close-ups of flowers or cat noses. But the optical quality overall is a letdown, landing in the 16th percentile, and that slow f/3.5 max aperture really cramps low-light shooting. Users often say the sharpness is 'excellent,' but our numbers show it's a classic case of expectations being low for a converter.

Performance Percentiles

AF 53.3
Bokeh 13.5
Build 42.6
Macro 97.2
Optical 16.9
Aperture 20.5
User Sentiment 30.7
Versatility 34.3
Social Proof 20.2
Stabilization 34.2

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Affordable entry into fisheye if you own the 28mm 97th
  • Surprisingly strong macro performance
  • Fun, creative perspective that's hard to replicate
  • Easy to attach and instantly recognized by the camera

Cons

  • Heavy and unbalanced on small camera bodies 14th
  • Optical quality lags far behind dedicated lenses 17th
  • Requires the expensive FE 28mm F2 to even work 20th
  • f/3.5 maximum aperture is dim and limiting 21th

The Word on the Street

3.8/5 (116 reviews)
👍 Most buyers rave about the creative punch it adds and say the image quality is way better than they'd expect from a screw-on attachment.
👎 Weight is the number one complaint—this thing makes even an a6500 feel like a front-heavy brick, and one-handed shooting is a chore.
🤔 The field of view gets mixed reactions; some find it plenty wide, while others expected a more extreme fisheye effect for the price.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type fisheye
Focal Length Min 16
Focal Length Max 16

Aperture

Max Aperture 22
Min Aperture 3.5

Build

Mount Sony E
Format full-frame
Weight 0.4 kg / 0.9 lbs

Focus

Min Focus Distance 28

Value & Pricing

At the low end of its $348 - $45000 price spread (that $45k is likely a placeholder or error), the real-world cost is around $348 from Amazon. If you can snag it for that, it's reasonable value given the creative possibilities. But don't pay more, and don't buy it without already owning the 28mm. The extra cost of the host lens makes the total investment climb quickly, and at that point a manual fisheye from Samyang or Rokinon gives you faster apertures and better optics for similar money.

348 USD

vs Competition

The Viltrox AF 9mm F2.8 is a true ultrawide prime for Sony E that's faster, lighter, and optically superior, though it's rectilinear and not a fisheye. The Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN is a stellar zoom with much more versatility and autofocus performance. Both are better lenses on their own, but neither delivers the distinct fisheye distortion this converter creates. So this is a specialty tool: if you want that bulging, curved look and you're already in the Sony 28mm ecosystem, it's the only game in town. Just be ready to trade sharpness for wackiness.

Spec Sony SEL057FEC Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm F3.5-6.7 DC OS Viltrox AF 56mm f/1.7 Meike Neo Series MK-5514STM-Z Panasonic LUMIX S S-R28200 Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD
Focal Length 16mm 16-300mm 56mm 55mm 28-200mm 18-300mm
Max Aperture 22 f/1.4 f/1.7 f/1.4 f/4 f/3.5
Mount Sony E Sony E Fujifilm X Nikon Z L-Mount Fuji X
Stabilization false true true true true true
Weather Sealed false true false false true false
Weight (g) 417 1089 171 280 413 92
AF Type - HLA STM STM Autofocus VXD linear motor
Lens Type fisheye zoom prime prime macro zoom
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AfBokehBuildMacroOpticalApertureUser SentimentVersatilitySocial ProofStabilization
Sony SEL057FEC 53.313.542.697.216.920.530.734.320.234.2
Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm F3.5-6.7 DC OS Compare 53.394.333.884.598.994.4099.789.699.1
Viltrox AF 56mm f/1.7 Compare 85.891.985.794.269.891.263.834.389.679.6
Meike Neo Series MK-5514STM-Z Compare 85.894.373.294.551.194.480.234.389.679.6
Panasonic LUMIX S S-R28200 Compare 53.369.873.887.591.463095.989.699.5
Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Compare 98.166.695.886.475.269.530.799.368.979.6

Common Questions

Q: Does this work on any Sony lens?

No, it only fits the FE 28mm f/2. Thread it onto anything else and you'll either damage it or get weird vignetting. It's a one-lens party.

Q: Does it make my setup front-heavy?

Yep, at 417g it's not light. Pair it with a small body like an a6000 or a6500 and you'll feel the tilt. A grip or tripod helps, but handholding for long sessions gets tiresome.

Q: Is the image quality good enough for professional work?

For fun social content or creative portraits, sure. But for paid gigs requiring edge-to-edge sharpness, it's a pass. The corners get soft and the f/3.5 aperture means noisy low-light shots.

Who Should Skip This

If you don't already own the FE 28mm F2, or you expect tack-sharp optics, this isn't for you. Grab a Rokinon 12mm f/2.8 fisheye instead—it's faster, sharper, and doesn't need a host lens. Also, video shooters should stay away; the manual focus and awkward balance make it a pain on gimbals.

Verdict

Buy it only if you already shoot with the FE 28mm F2 and crave a fisheye look without spending a fortune. The weight and optical compromises are real, but the macro capability and instant creative jolt make it worth the $350 if that's your scenario. For everyone else, skip this and get a proper manual fisheye like the Rokinon 12mm f/2.8. You'll get better image quality and a brighter aperture without the camera-balancing act.

Usage Scores

Macro (46.8)Overall (26.4)Budget (23.5)Street (21.6)Travel (18)Portrait (17.8)Landscape (16.3)Professional (18.5)Video Cinema (17.6)Wildlife Sports (21.1)

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