Recently I’ve been yearning for the late 2000s and early 2010s. And not just to recapture my youth. It’s more because of the fact that I loved image quality from back then. Thankfully Viltrox sent me their 50mm f1.4 PRO LAB lens. And let me tell you, something about it screams of the Zeiss Sony collabs of this time.
Table of Contents
The Big Picture: Viltrox 50mm f1.4 AF PRO LAB Review Conclusions
In the United States, the Viltrox 50mm f1.4 AF Pro will cost only $549. That’s enough to make it an impulse buy in so many different ways. Viltrox packed weather resistance, good classic image quality, fast autofocus, and high quality into this body. Truly, there’s nothing to dislike about this new lens except that I wish it were just a bit smaller.
I’m awarding the Viltrox 50mm f1.4 AF Pro five out of five stars.
Experience
Using the Viltrox 50mm f1.4 AF Pro with the Sony a7 original and the Sony a7r III seemed to transport me back to a time before Viltrox was even getting a lot of coverage from the press. Well, in some ways that the case. The image quality of this lens feels like it’s a direct successor to some of Sony’s older lenses. But we’ll get to that in the next section.
What you should know about the Viltrox 50mm f1.4 AF Pro is that it feels like the company’s other higher end lenses. That means that it’s built well, weather resistant, and has various controls all over. But perhaps what’s best about this lens’s interface is how nice the clicked aperture is. It almost feels like the aperture is really paired to the lens instead of being electronically controlled. Of course, you can turn off the click mechanism. But I really don’t understand why you’d want to do that.




When shooting with this lens, I encountered some odd things that you’d find when you’re using a pre-production lens. At times, the autofocus would freeze up and even freeze the camera. So I’d have to pull the battery to get it to work again. This is usually fixed with firmware updates. So I expect that to also be the same case.
The autofocus also wasn’t always spot on when using face detection. This, I know I’ve seen change with firmware updates.
Recently, I’ve been working to shoot with cameras in AF-S mode with scene detection totally turned off in order to see how their autofocus works without the assistance of AI. Obviously, I’m using much older cameras, and most of the internet agrees that it’s probably not worth upgrading to newer ones unless you need the features. In this case though, this lens really taught me how much we’ve all come to rely on things like face detection.
Image Quality
There’s really something very special about the image quality of the Viltrox 50mm f1.4 AF Pro lens. When I attached it to my Sony a7r III and my Sony a7 original, I felt like there was something that’s been missing from photography for a really long time. Where Sony held back a bit on bringing back character with the 50mm f1.4 GM lens, this Viltrox lens seems to bring me back to even before Sony’s 2016 50mm f1.4 Zeiss collaboration. This lens instead reminds me of the Sony NEX and early full-frame Alpha camera days. And there’s truly something about that I’m smitten with.
I can see it in how the images seem to naturally be rendered like an HDR or some sort while also having very specific boosts to saturation in specific colors. Yet at the same time, there seems to be modern enhancements to the sharpness and even the bokeh.
SCapture One categorizes this lens as the Sony 50mm f1.4 GM when it comes to lens correction. And I’m not sure why it’s doing that. But if Viltrox is indeed making a lens to compete with that, then they’re doing a very, very fine job. When I asked Viltrox about this, they told us that the latest version of the software isn’t compatible with the lens.
The following images were edited in Capture One.






















These images below are shot straight out of camera and converted to JPEG.

































Tech Specs
- 11 aperture blades
- VCM motor
- 800 gram weight
- 77mm filter thread
- 15 elements in 11 groups
- 8 HR elements
- 3 ED elements
- 1 UA element
- Weather resistance
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