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Trioplan 50mm f/2.8 II 50mm

The revised triplet optical design with coated Schott glass and a 12-blade diaphragm produces the signature soap bubble bokeh with improved contrast and central sharpness. Its all-metal, manual-focus build revives a century-old character lens with modern glass coatings for color neutrality in strong light. This lens is best for portrait photographers who prioritize ethereal, swirly background rendering over clinical sharpness or autofocus convenience.

Focal length 50mm
Aperture f/2.8
Mount Nikon F
stabilization false
weather sealed false
weight g 1256
Trioplan 50mm f/2.8 II 50mm lens
30 Overall Score
Also available in:

About This Lens

The revised triplet optical design with coated Schott glass and a 12-blade diaphragm produces the signature soap bubble bokeh with improved contrast and central sharpness. Its all-metal, manual-focus build revives a century-old character lens with modern glass coatings for color neutrality in strong light. This lens is best for portrait photographers who prioritize ethereal, swirly background rendering over clinical sharpness or autofocus convenience.

  • Focal length 50mm
  • Max aperture f/2.8
  • Mount Nikon F
  • Weight g 1256

The 30-Second Version

The Trioplan 50mm f/2.8 II is a manual focus prime lens that nails the vintage soap bubble bokeh look and ignores everything else. Sharpness and versatility rank at the bottom of our charts, but if distinctive out-of-focus rendering is your priority, it's a unique option for Nikon F shooters.

Overview

The Meyer-Optik Görlitz Trioplan 50mm f/2.8 II is not the kind of lens you buy for sharpness charts or clinical perfection. It's a manual focus prime built around one very specific party trick: that swirly, ethereal soap bubble bokeh old-school photographers keep hunting for. This is version II, updated for Nikon F-mount with a revised triplet design and modern Schott glass coatings, but it remains gloriously, stubbornly analog. If you've been asking yourself 'is the Trioplan 50mm good for portraits?' or 'can it deliver that vintage look on a modern DSLR?' — stick with me. At a street price between $599 and $826, it's a niche tool that'll either delight you or leave you wondering why you didn't just grab a used 50mm f/1.8 for a fraction of the cash.

Performance

Let's get the ugly stuff out of the way first. In our database, this lens ranks dead last for overall optical quality. That zero percentile isn't a typo — by any modern standard, corner sharpness, distortion control, and chromatic aberration handling are rough. Wide open at f/2.8, the center is acceptably crisp but the edges fall apart fast. Stop down and things tighten up, but if you're chasing resolution charts, you've wandered into the wrong store. But nobody buys a Trioplan for that. The bokeh, which sits comfortably in the top tier of our rankings, is what you're paying for. Those 12 aperture blades stay remarkably circular, and out-of-focus highlights take on that distinctive bubble-like character — especially when you've got specular reflections in the background. It's a look you can't fake in post. The manual focus ring is damped well enough, though at 1,256 grams this is a dense chunk of metal and glass that'll make your setup noticeably front-heavy.

Performance Percentiles

AF 54.5
Bokeh 92
Build 11.5
Macro 58
Optical 0.2
Aperture 83.5
Versatility 34.1
Stabilization 36.1

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Truly unique soap bubble bokeh character 92th
  • Beautiful 12-blade circular aperture 84th
  • Solid, tactile manual focus feel
  • Modern Schott coatings improve contrast over the original
  • Full-frame coverage without vignetting drama

Cons

  • Dead last in our optical quality tests
  • Heavy at over 1.2kg 12th
  • No autofocus, no EXIF data, no weather sealing 34th
  • Minimum focus distance of 40cm limits close-ups
  • Build quality feels behind most modern primes

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Focal Length Min 50
Focal Length Max 50
Elements 3
Groups 3

Aperture

Max Aperture f/2.8
Min Aperture f/22
Diaphragm Blades 12

Build

Mount Nikon F
Format Full-Frame
Weight 1.3 kg / 2.8 lbs
Filter Thread 52

AF & Stabilization

Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 400

Value & Pricing

At $599 to $826 depending on the vendor, the Trioplan 50mm f/2.8 II is asking a lot for a single-purpose art lens. That spread of $227 means it's worth shopping around before pulling the trigger. You could buy a used Nikon 50mm f/1.4G and a couple of speedlights for the same money and get far more versatility. But if the soap bubble look is exactly what your portrait kit or creative project has been missing, you won't find it anywhere else in Nikon F-mount without adapting vintage glass that likely needs service. Whether that's worth the premium is a decision only your eye (and your wallet) can make.

CA$826

vs Competition

Direct competitors are scarce. Something like the Nikon NIKKOR Z 18-140mm f/3.5-6.3 VR is worlds apart — it's an autofocus zoom with stabilization, weather resistance, and a fraction of the weight. Same goes for the Canon RF-S 18-150mm: useful, sharp, and utterly boring bokeh by comparison. If you want character in a native F-mount, you might look at adapting old Helios 44-2 lenses or the modern Lensbaby offerings, both of which deliver swirl for far less cash but without the Trioplan's bubbly precision. The Panasonic Lumix G X Leica 12-35mm or Sigma 10-18mm f/2.8 wide zooms are simply not relevant here; they're about covering ground, not making portraits feel like a dream sequence. The Trioplan exists in its own little bubble, literally and figuratively.

Spec Trioplan 50mm f/2.8 II 50mm Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm f/3.5-6.7 DC OS Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Nikon NIKKOR Z 28-400mm f/4-8 VR Panasonic LUMIX S S-R28200 Viltrox 13mm f1.4 F/1.4
Focal Length 50mm 16-300mm 18-300mm 28-400mm 28-200mm 13mm
Max Aperture f/2.8 f/3.5 f/3.5 f/4 f/4 f/1.4
Mount Nikon F Sony E Fuji X Nikon Z L-Mount Nikon Z
Stabilization false true true true true true
Weather Sealed false true false true true false
Weight (g) 1256 615 92 726 413 415
AF Type - HLA VXD linear motor STM Autofocus STM
Lens Type - zoom zoom zoom macro Wide-Angle
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AfBokehBuildMacroOpticalApertureVersatilityStabilization
Trioplan 50mm f/2.8 II 50mm 54.59211.5580.283.534.136.1
Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm f/3.5-6.7 DC OS Compare 54.584.158.98698.976.799.699.1
Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Compare 98.374.696.787.874.576.799.281.4
Nikon NIKKOR Z 28-400mm f/4-8 VR Compare 86.977.651.581.4977198.998.3
Panasonic LUMIX S S-R28200 Compare 54.577.674.47191.27195.799.4
Viltrox 13mm f1.4 F/1.4 Compare 86.996.642.289.582.596.334.181.4

Common Questions

Q: Does the Trioplan 50mm f/2.8 II have autofocus?

No, it's fully manual focus with no electronic contacts, so you won't get AF confirmation or EXIF lens data in your files.

Q: Is this lens good for portrait photography?

For creative portraits where bokeh is the star, absolutely. But the manual focus and weight make it less suited for fast-paced portrait sessions or candid work.

Q: Can I use the Trioplan 50mm on a Nikon DSLR?

Yes, it's designed for Nikon F-mount and covers full-frame sensors, so it works on both FX and DX bodies, though the field of view will be tighter on crop-sensor cameras.

Q: How does the bokeh compare to other 50mm lenses?

It's in a league of its own. Most modern 50mm primes aim for smooth, neutral blur; this one deliberately creates swirly, bubble-shaped highlights that give images a dreamy, vintage feel.

Who Should Skip This

If you need a sharp, dependable normal prime for everyday shooting, walk away. The optical performance — especially off-center — is shockingly bad by modern standards, and the lack of autofocus means kids, pets, and any spontaneous moment will be tough to nail. Shooters looking for something light and weather-sealed should look at the AF-S NIKKOR 50mm f/1.4G or the compact 50mm f/1.8G instead. This is a specialty instrument, not a replacement for a workhorse fifty.

Verdict

If you know exactly what the Trioplan 50mm f/2.8 II does and you've been craving that look, you'll probably love it — just be ready to drag a shutter speed down and shoot with intention. It's a creative tool, not a daily driver. For anyone who needs a reliable 50mm for events, street, or anything that moves faster than a posed model, this lens will frustrate you quickly. No autofocus, no electronic contacts feeding aperture data to the camera, and a noticeable heft that turns a casual walkaround into a forearm workout. The bokeh is special, but special doesn't always mean practical.

Usage Scores

Macro (28.2)Overall (30.1)Budget (31.2)Street (31.9)Travel (8.6)Portrait (49.1)Landscape (6.4)Professional (24.9)Video Cinema (28.8)Wildlife Sports (21.6)

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