PopPhoto.com -- The online home of American Photo and Popular Photography & Imaging

Free Newsletter: Camera reviews,
lens tests, photo news and more!
July 06, 2008
Search

Subscribe

Popular Photography American Photo
Subscriptions/Customer ServiceDigital Subscription
Give a GiftRenew My Subscription


Sigma 8mm f/3.5 EX DG AF

Sigma 8mm f/3.5 EX DG AF

Price (MSRP): $680.00
TYPE: Fish Eye


An updated version of Sigma's 8mm f/4 spherical fisheye, this is the field's widest circular fisheye with autofocus. It's also among the last Sigma film-era lenses to be upgraded with coatings that suppress reflections from digital sensors ("DG"). It captures a 180-degree field of view, with exaggerated perspective and dramatic linear distortion, especially along the frame edges. For full-circle images, you need a full-frame film or digital SLR; APS-scaled sensors crop into the top and bottom of the frame when the camera is oriented horizontally.

Hands on:
About average in size and weight by modern fisheye standards, the lens is all metal. The nicely damped manual-focus ring turns smoothly. AF action on the Canon EOS 30D was fast and quiet. Like Sigma's earlier 8mm f/4, the new f/3.5 has a spring-loaded filter holder inside the lensmount that accepts gelatin filters that you cut with the help of a supplied template. It also has an unusual hood-like filter holder that slides over the front of the barrel, accepts standard 72mm filters, and has a felt lining to control flare and reflections. Because of the lens' extreme angle of view, using this filter holder causes marginal yet noticeable vignetting. And if you use a built-in flash, the lens casts a relatively large shadow.

In the lab:
The magnification ratio was an impressive 1:4.38 at the very tight close-focusing distance of 5.12 inches, compared with 6.5 feet for the earlier lens. Such minimal focusing distances make for stunning perspective distortion, with foreground elements exploding in size relative to a very distant-seeming background. Due to their extreme angle of view and exaggerated linear curvature, fisheye lenses don't lend themselves to optical bench and wall-target tests. So we can't comment with precision on resolution, except to note that the center areas of field test images were acceptably sharp and contrasty.

Conclusions:
This unusual lens could make an enjoyable and, for pros, competitively significant addition to an optical arsenal. It visually distorts relative distance to put extra emphasis on a foreground subject, and its extreme barrel distortion makes rectilinear objects bow out as if they're ready to burst. Need to make an otherwise mundane subject visually interesting? This is your tool.


Focal Length 8 mm
Maximum Aperture f/3.5
Lens Mount Canon AF, Nikon AF, Pentax AF, Sony AF
Closest Focusing Distance 0.48 ft
Image Stabilization No
Lens Elements 11
Lens Groups 6
Weight 0.98 lb
Length 2.7 in
Diameter 2.9 in
Release Date March 2007
Compatible With Canon EOS-1V/1VHS
Canon EOS-3
Canon EOS 1D Mark II N
Canon EOS-1Ds
Canon EOS 5D
Kodak DCS Pro SLR/c
Canon EOS Rebel K2
Canon EOS Rebel T2
Canon EOS 1Ds Mark II
Canon EOS-1D Mark III
Fujifilm IS Pro
Canon EOS 40D
Canon EOS-1Ds Mark III
Nikon D3
Nikon D300
Pentax K100D Super
Sony Alpha DSLR-A700
Sony Alpha DSLR-A200
Canon EOS Rebel XSi
Nikon D60
Sony Alpha DSLR-A300
Sony Alpha DSLR-A350
Samsung GX-20

More Sigma 8mm f/3.5 EX DG AF Articles


Lens Test: Sigma 8mm f/3.5 EX DG AF

June 2007
Circular Fisheye Updated for digital SLRs, this unusual optic makes distortion fun.

Search for another lens

 

User Reviews
Here's how our visitors have reviewed this lens.
RATINGS
AVERAGE RATINGS
Overall quality
n/a
Ease of use
n/a
Fit and finish
n/a
Versatility
n/a
Legibility of exterior markings
n/a
Smoothness of zoom
n/a
Hoods and filters
n/a
Overall value
n/a
RATING SCALE: 1 = WORST 10 = BEST
Read other reviews
Submit your own review




Click to compare prices on photo equipment:


Newsletter Promo Button
Digital Days Promo Button
American Photo On Campus
Mentor Series Promo Button