Laowa Venus Optics Laowa 15mm f/4.5 Macro Lens (Canon Review

The Laowa 15mm f/4.5 Macro does one incredibly weird thing better than any other lens. We found out if that's enough to justify its quirks.

Focal Length 15mm
Max Aperture f/4.5
Mount Canon EF
Stabilization No
Weather Sealed No
Weight 309 g
Laowa Venus Optics Laowa 15mm f/4.5 Macro Lens (Canon lens
45.9 Genel Puan

The 30-Second Version

The Laowa 15mm f/4.5 Macro is a brilliantly weird specialist. Its 1:2 magnification on a 15mm wide-angle is unique, and optical sharpness is top-tier. But it's manual focus only and dim. Worth it only if you absolutely need its one magic trick.

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 also focus down to half life-size, letting you get right up in a bug's business with a massive field of view behind it. This isn't your everyday lens. It's a creative Swiss Army knife for photographers who want to see the world from a completely different perspective, trading autofocus and a bright aperture for a unique macro capability you can't find anywhere else.

Performance

Optically, this thing punches way above its price tag, landing in the 91st percentile for sharpness and clarity in our database. The 1:2 magnification on a 15mm lens is its party trick, creating wild, immersive close-ups with tons of background context. But you pay for that trick elsewhere: the f/4.5 max aperture is dim, the manual focus is a must for macro work, and the 5-blade diaphragm means out-of-focus areas can look a bit busy. It's sharp where it counts, but it's not a versatile all-rounder.

Performance Percentiles

AF 46.5
Bokeh 15.2
Build 86.2
Macro 92.1
Optical 90.7
Aperture 20.3
Versatility 37.4
Social Proof 5.7
Stabilization 38.3

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Strong macro (92th percentile) 92th
  • Strong optical (91th percentile) 91th
  • Strong build (86th percentile) 86th

Cons

  • Below average social proof (6th percentile) 6th
  • Below average bokeh (15th percentile) 15th
  • Below average aperture (20th percentile) 20th

The Word on the Street

0.0/5 (3 reviews)
👍 Users are consistently impressed with the unique creative possibilities and surprising sharpness of such a niche lens.
👎 A common point of confusion and frustration is the fully manual aperture control on some mounts, which dims the viewfinder as you stop down.
🤔 Many acknowledge it's a one-trick pony, but for those who need that trick, it's considered an indispensable and fun tool.

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 Canon EF
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 hard to call this a bad value. You're paying for a single, hyper-specialized feature that no other lens offers. If that feature—wide-angle macro—is exactly what you need, then it's worth every penny because nothing else does it. If you're just looking for a sharp 15mm lens, you can find faster, autofocus options for similar money that will be more useful day-to-day.

Price History

$350 $400 $450 $500 $550 $600 Mar 16Mar 22 $548

vs Competition

This lens exists in its own little universe. Compared to a standard macro like a Canon 100mm, you lose magnification and working distance but gain an insane environmental perspective. Against a typical wide-angle like a Samyang 14mm f/2.8, you gain macro but lose two full stops of light and autofocus. And it's nothing like the listed 'competitors' (zooms and standard primes); they're generalists, and this is a pure specialist. Your choice comes down to needing its one magic trick or not.

Common Questions

Q: Is the Laowa 15mm f/4.5 a true 1:1 macro lens?

No, it's a 1:2 macro lens, meaning the subject on your sensor is half its real-life size. That's still impressive for a 15mm lens and great for environmental close-ups.

Q: Can I use this for astrophotography?

It's possible, but not ideal. The f/4.5 aperture is quite dim for capturing stars, and it's fully manual, which makes focusing in the dark a precise challenge.

Q: How do you focus a manual macro lens this wide?

You'll need to use focus peaking or magnification on your camera's live view. The depth of field is very shallow up close, so precise manual focus is key to getting sharp shots.

Who Should Skip This

If you need autofocus for anything, look elsewhere. This lens is manual-only, which makes it a poor choice for events, fast-moving subjects, or anyone who prefers the convenience of AF. Also, skip it if you just want a general-purpose wide-angle; a faster, autofocus lens will serve you much better.

Verdict

Buy this lens if you're a creative photographer, bug enthusiast, or product shooter bored with traditional macro and want to create truly unique, expansive close-up images. It's a tool for a specific job, and for that job, it's brilliant. Just know going in that its quirks—manual focus, slow aperture—are part of the package.