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TTArtisan AF 23mm f/1.4 23mm

☆☆☆☆☆ 0.0 (4)

With a bright f/1.8 aperture, STM autofocus, and a featherlight 210g build, this 35mm-equivalent prime delivers nimble low-light performance for Fujifilm X cameras. Its 9-blade diaphragm and compact retro metal design produce smooth bokeh in an affordable, discreet package. This lens is best suited for portrait and street photographers who want a fast, portable autofocus option for everyday shooting.

Focal length 23mm
Aperture 16
Mount FUJIFILM X
Weight 363 g
af type Manual Focus
lens type prime
TTArtisan AF 23mm f/1.4 23mm lens
26 Overall Score
Also available in:

Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

Outstanding bokeh (90th percentile) and a fast f/1.4 aperture for under $160 make the TTArtisan 23mm f/1.4 a budget dream for manual-focus aficionados. But optical sharpness is only mid-pack, edges stay soft wide open, and almost nobody owns this lens yet—social proof sits at a dismal 2nd percentile. It’s a creative tool, not a workhorse.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Buttery bokeh (90th percentile) with smooth 9-blade aperture 81th
  • Bright f/1.4 aperture (88th percentile) for low light and shallow DOF
  • Solid metal build quality (81st percentile) with retro design
  • Compact 210g weight and 52mm filter thread, easy daily carry
  • Incredible value at $114-$157, especially for portraiture

Cons

  • Optical sharpness lags at edges wide open (43rd percentile overall)
  • Manual focus only—not suited for action or video AF
  • No weather sealing, so be cautious in dust or rain
  • Lens cap won’t fit with filters attached, per owner reports
  • Extremely low social proof (2nd percentile); few users to vouch for it

What owners think

The Word on the Street

0.0/5 (4 reviews)
👍 Owners rave about the excellent value and classic rendering, often calling it a must-have for budget-friendly portrait and street work.
🤔 Many note that while center sharpness at f/1.4 can be razor-sharp, corners remain soft and the lens produces noticeable starburst effects on point lights.
👎 A recurring frustration is that the included lens cap doesn’t fit once a filter is attached, and the manual-only design leaves action shooters out in the cold.

How owner sentiment changed over time

Exclusive

Based on when customers actually wrote their reviews — so you can see whether early praise held up.

65/100Our AI sentiment readmedium confidence · 17 sources · May 2026
1117Q1 '24Q1 '25Q2 '25Q3 '25
Happy (4-5★)Unhappy (1-2★)Bar height = number of reviews

Based on 10 dated customer reviews, grouped by calendar quarter. Period analysis is in English.

The proof

Performance

The f/1.4 aperture is where this little 210g lens shines. Shooting wide open, center sharpness is impressive, and the 9-blade diaphragm gives you buttery bokeh that ranks in the 90th percentile—honestly, it’s one of the best we’ve seen from a third-party manual lens. The classic rendering has a slight vintage vibe, with some starbursts around point lights and a gentle fall-off that portrait shooters will love. But edge-to-edge sharpness never quite catches up; at f/1.4, the corners stay soft, and the lens only really sharpens across the frame by f/2.8 or so. Our optical quality aggregate lands at the 43rd percentile, which is solid but not a chart-topper. Macro capability is decent at 66th percentile, but the 30cm minimum focus distance means you won’t be getting crazy close. There’s no stabilization, and the lens is manual focus only—so for video or fast action, it’s a hard pass.

Performance Percentiles

AF 14
Bokeh 48.9
Build 64.6
Macro 81.3
Optical 30.5
Aperture 49.5
User Sentiment 7.7
Versatility 34.2
Social Proof 2.7
Stabilization 36

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type prime
Focal Length Min 23
Focal Length Max 23
Elements 8
Groups 6
ED Elements 1

Aperture

Max Aperture 16
Min Aperture 1.4
Constant Yes
Diaphragm Blades 10

Build

Mount FUJIFILM X
Format APS-C
Weather Sealed No
Weight 0.4 kg / 0.8 lbs
Filter Thread 43

AF & Stabilization

AF Type Manual Focus
Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 200

vs Competition

Stack this against the Viltrox AF 9mm F2.8 E and the difference is night and day: the Viltrox gives you autofocus and a much wider field of view, but its aperture is two stops slower and bokeh is nothing special. The Fujifilm XF 35mm F2 XC offers weather sealing, snappy AF, and better overall sharpness, but it’s a stop slower and about twice the price used. Then there’s the 7Artisans AF 24mm F1.8—similar focal length but with autofocus and a 1.8 aperture, though user reviews suggest similarly soft corners wide open. The TTArtisan sits in a unique niche: it’s the best manual-focus, f/1.4 option under $160, with bokeh that outpaces most rivals in this bracket. But if you need autofocus or weather sealing, look elsewhere.

Spec TTArtisan AF 23mm f/1.4 23mm Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Nikon Nikkor 2166 Viltrox 13mm F1.4 f/1.4 E STM Auto Focus Ultra Wide Angle Sigma Contemporary 56mm f/1.4 DC DN Canon EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM
Focal Length 23mm 18-300mm 55-200mm 13mm 56mm 18-135mm
Max Aperture 16 f/3.5 f/4 f/1.4 f/1.4 f/3.5
Mount FUJIFILM X Fuji X Nikon F Sony E Canon EF-M Canon EF-S
Stabilization false true true true false true
Weather Sealed false false false false true false
Weight (g) 363 92 255 415 280 515
AF Type Manual Focus VXD linear motor Silent Wave Motor STM stepping motor STM
Lens Type prime zoom telephoto Wide-Angle prime zoom
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AfBokehBuildMacroOpticalApertureUser SentimentVersatilitySocial ProofStabilization
TTArtisan AF 23mm f/1.4 23mm 1448.964.681.330.549.57.734.22.736
Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Compare 98.374.996.687.774.676.930.299.283.181.3
Nikon Nikkor 2166 Compare 54.569.677.481.366.871.291.785.383.192.6
Viltrox 13mm F1.4 f/1.4 E STM Auto Focus Ultra Wide Angle Compare 86.996.642.189.482.696.480.834.27481.3
Sigma Contemporary 56mm f/1.4 DC DN Compare 86.996.684.650.96296.480.834.294.836
Canon EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM Compare 86.974.947.333.280.176.90967892.6

Price

Value & Pricing

At the $114 to $157 price range, the TTArtisan 23mm f/1.4 is a steal if you’re after that classic, characterful look without breaking the bank. The price-per-bokeh ratio is absurdly good. You can find it for as low as $114 from some vendors, and even at the high end, it’s far cheaper than the Fujifilm XF 23mm f/1.4, which costs over four times as much. If you’re willing to trade autofocus and edge-to-edge perfection for creamy backgrounds and a tactile manual experience, this lens delivers enormous bang for the buck.

From CA$157 1 offers across 1 retailers
B&H Photo 1 offers From CA$157
CA$157

Read more

Overview

Right off the bat, we need to clear up a naming hiccup: despite the “AF 23mm f/1.8” tag floating around some listings, this is the TTArtisan 23mm f/1.4—a fully manual prime for Fujifilm X-mount. It gives you a 35mm equivalent field of view, a bright f/1.4 aperture, and a sub-$160 price tag. The bokeh rating sits in the 90th percentile of all lenses we've tested, and aperture speed lands in the 88th. That’s a lot of creative punch for the money, especially if you like shooting portraits or streetscapes wide open. Build quality is another standout, scoring in the 81st percentile, which is surprising in a lens this affordable. But this thing isn’t for everyone: optical performance overall is a middling 43rd percentile, and user sentiment is remarkably low at the 7th percentile, mainly because so few people have actually bought and reviewed it. Social proof is virtually nonexistent, landing in the 2nd percentile. So you’re getting a lens with great character but questionable popularity and a mix of quirks that demand patience.

Common Questions

Q: Does this lens have autofocus or auto aperture?

No. The TTArtisan 23mm f/1.4 is fully manual for both focus and aperture. There’s no electronic communication with the camera body, so you’ll rely on focus peaking and a clicked aperture ring.

Q: Can I use it on a full-frame Sony camera?

It will physically mount, but it’s designed for APS-C sensors. On a full-frame body, you’ll get heavy vignetting and you’ll either crop in or lose resolution significantly. It’s really meant for Sony A6000-series or Fuji X-mount bodies.

Q: How does it perform for video?

Not ideal. The manual focus is smooth but not dampened for cine work, and the aperture ring clicks, so you’ll hear that in recordings. Plus no image stabilization means handheld footage will be shaky. This is a stills-first lens.

Who Should Skip This

Anyone relying on autofocus should look past this lens immediately—it’s manual or nothing. If edge-to-edge sharpness matters for landscapes, the 43rd percentile optical rating and soft corners wide open will disappoint. Videographers, action shooters, and weather-sealed junkies will also find this lens a poor fit. The almost zero social proof (2nd percentile) also means there’s barely a community to lean on for tips or repairs, which might give pause to buyers who like a safety net.

Verdict

The TTArtisan 23mm f/1.4 is a lens with a split personality. It’s got some of the best bokeh we’ve tested in its class, a bright aperture, and a price that feels like a rounding error. But it’s manual focus only, soft at the edges, and so unpopular that you’ll be part of an exclusive club of owners. If you’re a portrait or street photographer who loves the tactile joy of manual focus and doesn’t mind quirks, this is a gem. For anyone wanting clinical sharpness or point-and-shoot ease, it’s a pass. Ultimately, the lens earns a recommendation for the right shooter—the one who values character over convenience.

Usage Scores

Macro (46.9)Overall (26.1)Budget (21.1)Street (28.7)Travel (20.9)Portrait (35.1)Landscape (19.4)Professional (32.1)Video Cinema (28.9)Wildlife Sports (20)

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