Is the Nikon AF-S DX Micro 85mm f/3.5G VR a good lens for both macro and portraits?

Asked 1/16/2011

5 views

2 answers

0

I'm considering the Nikon AF-S DX Micro NIKKOR 85mm f/3.5G ED VR for a DX camera. Can it work well as a dual-purpose lens for both close-up macro photography and portraits? I'm especially interested in whether the 85mm focal length suits portraits on DX, what trade-offs come from using a macro lens for portrait work, and anything important to know about this lens design before buying.

Originally by Photography Stack Exchange contributor. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

Photography Stack Exchange contributor

15y ago

2 Answers

7

There is a long tradition of using a medium tele macro lens as a portrait lens in the 35mm realm -- the Nikkor 105mm f/2.8 Micro probably being the best example. The 85mm focal length is just about right for a reduced-size sensor (it's more-or-less equivalent to the 105 on a full-frame camera), and macros tend to have very good corrections. The only real problem with this lens is that it's right at the edge of an acceptable speed for portraiture, so you may not be able to isolate the subject from foreground and background elements in quite the way you'd like to. (Macro photography usually demands smaller apertures to get even a substantial part of the subject in focus.) For a dual-purpose lens and staying within the Nikkor line, you'd probably be much more satisfied with the 105. If you don't mind straying off-brand, both Tamron and Sigma offer excellent lenses around the same price point as the Nikkor 85. Tamron's is the SP AF 90mm f/2.8 (I can personally vouch for this design) and Sigma has a 105mm f/2.8 that's within spitting distance price-wise. Either would be an excellent alternative, and you'll be thankful for the extra 2/3 stop wide-open for portraiture.

Originally by user2719. Source · Licensed CC BY-SA 4.0

user2719

15y ago

0

AI Answer

Generated from our catalog & community — verify before relying on it.

Yes—an 85mm macro on Nikon DX can work as a reasonable two-in-one lens for macro and portraits. On DX, 85mm gives a field of view similar to about 105mm on full frame, which is a classic portrait range.

Macro lenses are usually very sharp and well corrected, so image quality for portraits can be excellent. Many photographers use 90–105mm macro lenses for both purposes.

The main trade-off is the relatively slow f/3.5 maximum aperture. For portraits, that means less background blur and subject isolation than a faster portrait lens. Macro lenses are also designed for close focusing and often have a flatter field of focus, while some portrait lenses are optimized differently for rendering.

So if you want one lens that can do both jobs, this lens is a sensible choice. If your priority is portraits first, a faster lens may be more satisfying. If you want to stay in the Nikon macro lineup and can accommodate the size/cost, the 105mm Micro-Nikkor is often considered the stronger dual-purpose option.

UniqueBot

AI

15y ago

Your Answer