Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x Supermicro

★★★★☆ 4.0 (4)

Delivering up to 50:1 magnification with a numerical aperture range of 0.15 to 0.5, this full-frame manual-focus lens functions as a camera-mounted microscope with a fixed 20mm working distance. Interchangeable tubes enable swift switching between 10x, 20x, 35x, and 50x without reconfiguring the setup, and the 390g build keeps the system portable for field use. It suits macro specialists documenting microelectronic components, insect anatomy, or scientific specimens where standard 1:1 optics fall short.

Aperture f/10
Mount Canon EF
Weight 390 g
af type manual focus only
lens type macro
Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x Supermicro lens
36 Overall Score
Also available in:

Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

The Laowa Aurogon is a microscope for your camera, delivering 10x to 50x magnification on full-frame bodies. It's the absolute best we've tested for extreme macro, but it demands a precise, vibration-free setup and offers zero automation. At around $1,350, it's a specialist tool with a steep learning curve. If you're not shooting dead specimens or silicon wafers, look elsewhere.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • True 10x-50x magnification with interchangeable tubes, no other consumer lens comes close 100th
  • Full-frame image circle, no ugly circular vignette like adapted microscope objectives
  • Fixed 20mm working distance simplifies repeatability across magnifications
  • Lightweight at 390g, won't stress your macro rail or bellows
  • Numerical aperture adjustable up to 0.5, giving some control over resolution vs. depth of field

Cons

  • Manual focus only, no electronic communication with the camera at all
  • No image stabilization, completely unusable handheld at high magnification
  • Effective viewfinder image is extremely dark, makes composing and focusing painful without live view
  • Requires a rock-solid copy stand and precise alignment, setup time is measured in minutes, not seconds
  • No weather sealing and all-plastic build feels a bit cost-cut for a $1,350 lens

What owners think

The Word on the Street

4.0/5 (4 reviews)
👎 The overwhelming sentiment from early buyers is frustration with the lens's demanding setup. Achieving sharp focus requires a perfectly rigid copy stand, and even then, the slightest vibration ruins the shot.
👎 A common complaint is that the lens cannot be adapted to Micro Four Thirds cameras, shutting out a segment of the macro community despite hopes of cross-system compatibility.
🤔 Some users who invested in a proper macro rail and powerful constant lighting report that the resolution at 10x and 20x is stunning, but they emphasize the need for a lab-like environment to get there.
👎 Several owners note the build quality feels a bit plasticky given the price, and with no weather sealing, it's strictly an indoor tool.

How owner sentiment changed over time

Exclusive

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

211Q1 '24Q4 '25Q1 '26
Happy (4-5★)Unhappy (1-2★)Bar height = number of reviews

Based on 4 dated customer reviews, grouped by calendar quarter. Period analysis is in English.

The proof

Performance

In our macro test suite, the Aurogon is the top dog. No other lens we've measured can resolve detail at 50x on a full-frame sensor. At 10x, you can count the individual facets on a fly's eye with a solid copy stand and a little patience. The image circle covers a full 36x24mm sensor evenly, no vignetting circle like you'd get with a microscope objective tapped onto a bellows. Contrast is decent when you nail focus, but the effective aperture is small enough that diffraction starts softening fine detail above 20x, no matter how perfect your technique. That's not a flaw of the lens, it's physics, and Laowa has pushed it about as far as reasonable.

Now for a reality check: if you drop this lens into our standard optical test and measure it like a 50mm f/1.8, it scores in the bottom sixth of all lenses. That's because our suite evaluates sharpness at infinity, off-axis performance, and general-purpose rendering, none of which the Aurogon was ever designed to do. Try to shoot a landscape with it and the image is a blurry mess. So the performance story is simple: for extreme macro, it's peerless. For anything else, pretend it doesn't exist on your shelf.

Performance Percentiles

AF 14.5
Bokeh 60.9
Build 45.8
Macro 99.9
Optical 16.1
Aperture 61
Versatility 34.1
Social Proof 13.4
Stabilization 36

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type macro

Aperture

Max Aperture f/10
Min Aperture 0.15
Constant No
Diaphragm Blades 9

Build

Mount Canon EF
Format full-frame
Weight 0.4 kg / 0.9 lbs

AF & Stabilization

AF Type manual focus only
Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 20
Max Magnification 50:1

vs Competition

You'll notice the top competitors in our database are things like the Nikon Z 18-140mm f/3.5-6.3 VR and the Canon RF-S 18-150mm IS STM. Those are everyday travel zooms, and they have precisely zero overlap with the Aurogon's purpose. Ignore that list, it's generated by category overlap, not real rivalry. The actual challengers come from specialized macro glass. The Canon MP-E 65mm f/2.8 1-5x is the closest comparison, offering more working distance (about 100mm) and a wider magnification range, but it stops at 5x. It's also easier to use because the viewfinder stays brighter and the depth of field, while still razor-thin, is more forgiving.

If you don't need more than 5x, get the MP-E or the Mitakon Zhongyi Creator 20mm f/2 4.5x Super Macro, both of which are cheaper and less finicky. For those who need to go beyond, adapted microscope objectives from the likes of Mitutoyo or Nikon are the enthusiast path, but they come with sensor coverage headaches and weird adapters. The Aurogon simplifies the equation: it's a native camera mount, full-frame, no flickering light path, and you can switch magnifications in seconds. The trade-off is that you're locked into a fixed dark aperture and you can't use it for anything but that narrow, glorious niche.

Spec Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x Supermicro 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 G Leica DG Vario-Elmarit H-ES50200 Canon EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM
Focal Length - 16-300mm 18-300mm 28-400mm 50-200mm 18-135mm
Max Aperture f/10 f/3.5 f/3.5 f/4 f/2.8 f/3.5
Mount Canon EF Sony E Fuji X Nikon Z Micro Four Thirds Canon EF-S
Stabilization false true true true true true
Weather Sealed false true false true true false
Weight (g) 390 615 92 726 655 515
AF Type manual focus only HLA VXD linear motor STM linear motor STM
Lens Type macro zoom zoom zoom telephoto zoom
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AfBokehBuildMacroOpticalApertureVersatilitySocial ProofStabilization
Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x Supermicro 14.560.945.899.916.16134.113.436
Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm f/3.5-6.7 DC OS Compare 54.884.658.785.998.977.599.67899
Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Compare 98.375.596.487.874.377.599.283.181.1
Nikon NIKKOR Z 28-400mm f/4-8 VR Compare 86.678.451.181.29771.898.983.198.2
Panasonic LUMIX G Leica DG Vario-Elmarit H-ES50200 Compare 98.386.454.822.995.98488.365.996.3
Canon EF-S 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6 IS USM Compare 86.675.546.833.379.877.5967892.5

Price

Value & Pricing

Pricing for the Laowa Aurogon is all over the map. We've seen it as low as $1,350 from some retailers and as high as $2,042 elsewhere, so shop around before you click buy. At the low end, it's cheaper than a decent research-grade microscope objective with a DSLR adapter and way easier to use. But that price tag only gets you the lens. You'll also need a stable macro rail (another $150-$300), a good continuous lighting setup, and probably a focusing rack or a StackShot system if you plan on stacking images. Suddenly you're looking at a $2,000+ investment.

Compared to dedicated extreme macro solutions, the Aurogon is actually good value. The classic Canon MP-E 65mm goes to 5x for about $1,000, but you'd need a microscope objective to hit 10x, which means adapters, coupling rings, and a lot of trial and error. So if 10x-50x is your goal, the Laowa undercuts the old-school approach in both cost and hassle. For anyone who only needs 1x-2x macro, though, this lens is a massive overspend. Grab a Laowa 100mm f/2.8 2x instead and pocket the difference.

From CA$2,042 1 offers across 1 retailers
B&H Photo 1 offers From CA$2,042
CA$2,042

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Overview

The Laowa Aurogon FF 10-50x Supermicro isn't a lens in the traditional sense, it's a microscope that screws onto your Canon camera. We're talking 10x to 50x magnification on a full-frame sensor, enough to turn a grain of sand into a landscape. It's a two-piece system: a primary lens with an adjustable aperture and a set of interchangeable magnification tubes, all built around a fixed 20mm working distance. If you've ever tried to photograph snowflakes, silicon wafers, or the compound eyes of a beetle, this thing was made for you. Just don't expect to point it at a flower and get a nice handheld shot. This is lab-grade precision in a camera mount.

Who's it for? Honestly, a very specific crowd. Entomologists, forensic analysts, watchmakers, mineralogists, anyone who needs extreme macro without a trinocular microscope and stacking software. The Aurogon sits in the 100th percentile for macro in our database, making it the absolute best we've seen for pure reproduction. But that crown comes with caveats: manual focus only, no stabilization, a dark viewfinder, and a shallow depth of field measured in microns. If your workflow already involves a macro rail, a flash bracket, and a lot of patience, you'll feel right at home. If not, the learning curve might make you regret the $1,350 entry price.

What makes it interesting is that it brings microscope-level optical quality to a DSLR without the janky adapters and odd crop factors you usually deal with. The numerical aperture ranges from 0.15 to 0.5, which translates to effective f-stops that climb fast as you increase magnification. At 10x you're already working with an effective aperture around f/3.3-f/10 depending on the setting, and at 50x you're well into the diffraction zone. But the lens is optimized for that, delivering crisp detail right where you need it. The four interchangeable tubes mean you don't have to swap whole lens assemblies, and the fixed focus distance keeps your rig consistent. That's clever engineering for a niche that usually gets ignored by big brands.

Common Questions

Q: Can I use the Aurogon on a Micro Four Thirds camera with an adapter?

Unfortunately no. The lens's optical design requires a specific flange distance and full-frame coverage that can't be preserved with any existing adapter for MFT. You'd lose infinity focus and the image circle would be severely vignetted, even if you managed to physically mount it.

Q: Will this lens work on a Nikon Z camera with an FTZ adapter?

If you have the Canon EF version, you'd need a Canon-to-Z adapter, which could potentially work because the lens is fully manual. However, the better route is to get the native Nikon Z mount version of the Aurogon directly, which requires no adapter and ensures the correct flange distance for critical macro work.

Q: Does the lens project a circular image or fill the whole full-frame sensor?

It fills the entire full-frame sensor. Unlike many microscope objectives adapted for cameras, the Aurogon is designed to project a rectangular 36x24mm image circle, so you won't see the black corners that plague DIY microscope setups.

Q: How do you focus this lens when the working distance is fixed?

Focusing is done by moving the entire camera-plus-lens assembly forward or backward relative to the subject, typically using a macro focusing rail. The lens itself has no focus ring; you set the magnification tube, lock the distance to 20mm, and then rack the rail until your subject is sharp.

Who Should Skip This

Skip the Aurogon if you plan to shoot anything that moves. Living insects outdoors, flowing water, or even a flower swaying in a breeze will be impossible to capture because the depth of field is paper-thin and the effective shutter speeds are brutally slow. You'll just end up with a blurry mess. Also skip it if you don't already own a solid macro rail, a heavy tripod, and a strong continuous LED or flash system. The lens is only one part of a whole expensive ecosystem.

If your macro ambitions top out at 2x or 3x, grab a Laowa 100mm f/2.8 2x or the Canon MP-E 65mm. Both are vastly more forgiving and let you work handheld in decent light. And if you're simply curious about extreme macro, rent the Aurogon first. Dropping $1,350 on a lens that'll spend most of its life in a cupboard is a mistake we'd hate for you to make.

Verdict

If you routinely photograph things you need a microscope to see, the Laowa Aurogon is the most elegant, hassle-free way to get 10x to 50x on a full-frame DSLR. I'd recommend it to university labs, forensic departments, and serious macro artists who already own a good stacking rail and understand how to brace their rig against even a breath. It eliminates the adapters, the image circle weirdness, and the guesswork, and at $1,350 it's actually a bargain relative to a dedicated microscope camera setup.

For everyone else, this lens is a very expensive way to learn that you hate extreme macro. The manual focus, the absurdly shallow depth of field, and the mandatory tripod-and-rail life will chew up your patience if you're a casual bug chaser. Start with a 2x macro or rent an MP-E 65mm and see if you enjoy the process before dropping cash on the Aurogon. And if you think you'll ever use it for a portrait or a landscape, just forget it, this lens does one thing, and it does it without compromise.

Usage Scores

Macro (52.5)Overall (35.8)Budget (24.4)Street (27.9)Travel (18.2)Portrait (39.3)Landscape (14.5)Professional (24.2)Video Cinema (23.5)Wildlife Sports (16.9)

Other Configurations1

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