TTArtisan TTArtisan 17mm f/1.4 Lens for Nikon Z (Black) Review

The TTArtisan 17mm f/1.4 is a manual-focus oddball with stunning bokeh for $139. It's a niche creative tool, not your everyday lens.

Focal Length 17mm
Max Aperture f/1.4
Mount Nikon Z
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 247 g
TTArtisan TTArtisan 17mm f/1.4 Lens for Nikon Z (Black) lens
81.1 Pontuação Geral

The 30-Second Version

A manual-focus oddball with shockingly good bokeh for $139. Perfect for tinkerers, frustrating for everyone else.

Overview

Look, here's the one thing you need to know about the TTArtisan 17mm f/1.4: it's a weird, fun, and surprisingly well-built little lens that asks you to work for your shots. For $139, you're getting an ultra-wide prime with a massive f/1.4 aperture, but you're also getting a fully manual experience on a camera system built for autofocus. It's a niche tool, not a daily driver.

Performance

The biggest surprise is how good the bokeh is for a wide-angle lens. Our data puts it in the 93rd percentile for bokeh quality, which is frankly wild for a lens this wide and this cheap. The 10-blade diaphragm creates smooth, pleasing out-of-focus areas that you don't typically expect from a 17mm. The trade-off? Everything else is manual, so that beautiful bokeh comes only if you nail the focus yourself.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.5
Bokeh 92.9
Build 89.6
Macro 75.6
Optical 67.7
Aperture 88.3
Versatility 37.4
Social Proof 64.1
Stabilization 38.3

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Stunning bokeh quality for the price and focal length. 93th
  • Incredibly solid metal build feels premium. 90th
  • That f/1.4 aperture is huge for low-light and creative shots. 88th
  • Tiny, lightweight package that's perfect for a small kit. 76th

Cons

  • Fully manual focus on a Z-mount body feels awkward and slow.
  • No weather sealing means it's a fair-weather friend.
  • Optical performance is just okay, with some softness wide open.
  • The 17mm focal length on APS-C (25.5mm equivalent) is a weird, neither-here-nor-there wide angle.

The Word on the Street

0.0/5 (4 reviews)
👍 Early adopters are blown away by the build quality and bokeh they're getting for such a low price.
👎 The lack of autofocus is a constant headache for anyone trying to use this lens for anything beyond static scenes.
🤔 People love the character it adds to images, but admit the weird 25.5mm equivalent focal length makes it hard to find a consistent use case.

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Focal Length Min 17
Focal Length Max 17
Elements 9
Groups 8

Aperture

Max Aperture f/1.4
Min Aperture f/16
Diaphragm Blades 10

Build

Mount Nikon Z
Format APS-C
Weight 0.2 kg / 0.5 lbs
Filter Thread 41

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 200

Value & Pricing

At $139, it's hard to call this a bad value. You're paying for two things: the metal barrel and the f/1.4 glass. If you want to play with manual ultra-wide photography on a budget, it's a steal. If you need autofocus, it's a paperweight. The value is entirely in your hands.

Price History

$120 $140 $160 $180 $200 Mar 16Mar 22Mar 22 $191

vs Competition

This lens exists in a strange space. Compared to the Nikon Z DX 16-50mm f/3.5-6.3 kit zoom, you get way more light and creative control but lose all convenience and versatility. Against something like the Viltrox 35mm f/1.7 Z, you get a wider field of view and faster aperture, but the Viltrox has autofocus, which for most people is a deal-breaker. The TTArtisan is for a very specific photographer who the others ignore.

Common Questions

Q: Is the manual focus hard to use on a Nikon Z camera?

Yes, it's a challenge. You lose all the autofocus assists you're used to. It's purely a focus-by-wire experience using the screen or viewfinder. Great for learning, slow for action.

Q: Can I use this for video?

You can, but pulling manual focus on a wide-angle lens during video is a specialized skill. The lack of stabilization also means you'll want a gimbal. It's possible, but not ideal.

Q: Is it sharp?

It's decent. Our optical score is 65th percentile, meaning it's middle-of-the-road. It's soft at f/1.4, sharpens up by f/2.8, but don't expect clinical perfection. It has character.

Who Should Skip This

If you're looking for a versatile, do-it-all lens for your Nikon Z50 or Z fc, this isn't it. Go get the Tamron 17-70mm f/2.8 instead. You'll miss the f/1.4 but gain zoom, autofocus, stabilization, and sanity.

Verdict

We can't recommend this as your only or even your main lens. But as a secondary, creative tool for a photographer who enjoys the manual process, it's a fascinating and affordable experiment. Buy it knowing it's a toy with serious optics, not a workhorse.