The Nikkor 50mm 1.8 lens


General impressions

  Nikkor 4

This is one of the most popular Nikkor lenses. Also one of the cheapest ones. Until recently it was for sale for approximately 140USD or EUR, a bargain for the quality and performance of that lens. The large aperture makes this lens excellent for low light shooting and for special effects using shallow DOF including portraiture.
The finishing is reasonable for a consumer lens (plasticky) and the AF motor is a bit noisy and slower than an AF-S lens, but this has never been a real issue in practice.

Another application for this lens is to use it in combination with extension tubes (my favorites are the Kenko tubes because they provide the full connectivity (AF kept) and because they are relatively cheap). With the three tubes in the kit on a 50mm lens you get a magnification of approximately 2:1, allowing to take amazing macro pictures. Optical quality being excellent, this is a fantastic combo for macro (not for bugs because of the working distance - too short)

The lens does not come with a pouch or a sun hood, only the lens caps (pinch type for the front one) are being delivered in the package.
I would recommend to buy a cheap rubber hood you can easily fold or unfold. I am also using a UV filter. (see picture)
And as usual for lenses with an aperture ring, lock the aperture on the highest value (smallest aperture), f22 in this case. Only then you'll be able to select the aperture on the camera (DSLR).

Pros
- incredible bargain - cheap
- excellent image quality
- normal field of view on a film camera, a short telelens on a DSLR
- ideal for portrait, low light shooting, and to play with thin DOF
- large aperture (1.8)

Cons
- It seems that Nikon just stopped producing this gem
- focal distance not perfect for DSLRs - not equivalent to the normal angle of view as for an SLR
- plastic build
- non AF-S motor
- no sun hood provided

Highly recommended - a lens everybody should have, probably the best value for money in the Nikkor line-up.

An example of the 50 1.8mm on the D200 at f1.8 (fully open)