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TTArtisan Tilt-Shift F-TS74-E-B 17mm

★★★☆☆ 3.0 (3)

Manual ±8mm shift and ±8° tilt on an ultra-wide 17mm full-frame optic give this all-metal lens precise perspective control at a fraction of typical tilt-shift costs. The 360° rotating mechanism and 10-blade diaphragm add versatility for subtle focus manipulation, though the 1043g build limits travel use. It’s a practical choice for architectural and interior photographers needing affordable shift movements on Sony E bodies.

Focal length 17mm
Aperture 16
Mount Sony E
Weight 1051 g
af type Manual Focus
lens type tilt-shift
TTArtisan Tilt-Shift F-TS74-E-B 17mm lens
33 総合スコア
他の国でも利用可能:

Snapshot

The 30-Second Version

Soft enough to make you double-check your eyesight and built like a DIY project, this lens is for tinkerers, not photographers. Spend a bit more on a used Canon TS-E or stick to a sharp wide zoom and correct in post.

Pros & Cons

Pros

  • Ultra-affordable entry into tilt-shift photography 75th
  • Full-frame coverage with ±8° tilt and ±8mm shift 67th
  • 10-blade aperture delivers decent bokeh for an f/4 lens
  • 360° rotating mechanism for creative framing

Cons

  • Noticeably soft at all apertures, even stopped down
  • Feels cheap and plastic despite claimed metal build
  • No front filter threads due to bulging element
  • Heavy and awkward, poor stabilization for travel

What owners think

The Word on the Street

3.0/5 (3 reviews)
👎 Nearly every owner complains the images are mushy, no matter the aperture.
👎 The metal build feels cheap and the rotating mechanism grinds, not a sign of long-term durability.
🤔 A few hopeful buyers accept the flaws as the price of playing with tilt-shift for under $600.

購入者の評価が時間とともにどう変化したか

独自

顧客が実際にレビューを書いた時期に基づいています。発売当初の高評価が続いたかどうかがわかります。

21Q4 '25Q1 '26
満足(4〜5★)不満(1〜2★)バーの高さ = レビュー件数

日付のある顧客レビュー 3 件を暦四半期ごとに集計しています。期間別の分析は英語です。

The proof

Performance

What surprised us most, honestly, was just how soft it is across the frame. Our database puts its optical quality right around the 66th percentile, which sounds above average, but real-world shots look like someone smeared Vaseline on the rear element. Bokeh is pleasant enough thanks to a 10-blade diaphragm, but for a lens designed to keep architecture straight, the lack of bite really hurts. The manual focus ring has a mushy, grindy feel, and the all-metal construction claim doesn't match the hollow, janky experience. It's manual focus only, which is fine for a tilt-shift, but the dampening is too vague for precise adjustments.

Performance Percentiles

AF 14
Bokeh 48.9
Build 3.8
Macro 66.9
Optical 74.6
Aperture 49.5
Versatility 34.2
Social Proof 8.9
Stabilization 36

Specifications

Full Specifications

Optics

Type tilt-shift
Focal Length Min 17
Focal Length Max 17
Elements 17
Groups 11
Aspherical Elements 2

Aperture

Max Aperture 16
Min Aperture 4
Constant Yes
Diaphragm Blades 10

Build

Mount Sony E
Format full-frame
Weight 1.1 kg / 2.3 lbs

AF & Stabilization

AF Type Manual Focus
Stabilization No

Focus

Min Focus Distance 300

vs Competition

There's no direct tilt-shift rival at this price for Sony E. The Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN is a crop-sensor lens that's way sharper, lighter, and built better, though it covers a smaller sensor and can't do perspective correction optically. For Canon shooters, the RF 28-70mm F2.8 STM is a versatile standard zoom that lets you fix converging lines in Lightroom with a couple clicks. If you're dead set on real tilt-shift magic, save for a used Canon 17mm TS-E, which is in a different league optically and mechanically.

Spec TTArtisan Tilt-Shift F-TS74-E-B 17mm 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 Viltrox 13mm F1.4 f/1.4 E STM Auto Focus Ultra Wide Angle
Focal Length 17mm 16-300mm 18-300mm 28-400mm 50-200mm 13mm
Max Aperture 16 f/3.5 f/3.5 f/4 f/2.8 f/1.4
Mount Sony E Sony E Fuji X Nikon Z Micro Four Thirds Sony E
Stabilization false true true true true true
Weather Sealed false true false true true false
Weight (g) 1051 615 92 726 655 415
AF Type Manual Focus HLA VXD linear motor STM linear motor STM
Lens Type tilt-shift zoom zoom zoom telephoto Wide-Angle
Compare Compare Compare Compare Compare
Product AfBokehBuildMacroOpticalApertureVersatilitySocial ProofStabilization
TTArtisan Tilt-Shift F-TS74-E-B 17mm 1448.93.866.974.649.534.28.936
Sigma Contemporary 16-300mm f/3.5-6.7 DC OS Compare 54.584.35985.998.976.999.67899.1
Tamron Di III 18-300mm f/3.5-6.3 Di III-A VC VXD Compare 98.374.996.687.774.676.999.283.181.3
Nikon NIKKOR Z 28-400mm f/4-8 VR Compare 86.977.851.681.39771.298.983.198.3
Panasonic LUMIX G Leica DG Vario-Elmarit H-ES50200 Compare 98.386.155.323.195.983.788.365.996.4
Viltrox 13mm F1.4 f/1.4 E STM Auto Focus Ultra Wide Angle Compare 86.996.642.189.482.696.434.27481.3

Price

Value & Pricing

The lens ranges from $550 to $758 across vendors, with one store throwing it up for $550. If you absolutely must have tilt-shift on a tight budget and can live with the optical compromises, that low price almost makes it a novelty worth trying. But at the higher end, you're dangerously close to used professional options that blow this away. Check who's selling it cheapest, because the gap is huge, and paying $758 would be a mistake.

Read more

Overview

The TTArtisan 17mm f/4 tilt-shift is one of those lenses that looks amazing on a spec sheet but falls apart the second you mount it. The big thing to know? It's soft at every aperture, and the build quality is straight-up disappointing. TTArtisan bravely tries to bring affordable tilt-shift to Sony E-mount, and at $550 it's the cheapest full-frame option around, but the execution leaves you wishing they spent a little more time on the optics and a lot more on quality control.

Common Questions

Q: Can I use ND or CPL filters on this lens?

Nope, the front element bulges out so far there's no filter thread at all. You'd need rear gel filters or just shoot without.

Q: Is this lens good for real estate photography?

It lets you fix perspective, but the softness kills interior detail shots. For real estate, a sharp 10-18mm zoom with digital correction will look cleaner.

Q: Does it autofocus?

No, it's fully manual focus, which is normal for tilt-shift lenses. The focus ring feel is pretty mushy though, so nailing focus takes patience.

Who Should Skip This

If you're after a sharp, compact wide-angle that's easy to travel with, this isn't it. Grab the Sigma 10-18mm F2.8 DC DN instead. And if you're a pro architect who needs rock-solid tilt-shift results, skip the budget heartache and get a used Canon 17mm TS-E or the Laowa 15mm macro shift.

Verdict

The TTArtisan 17mm f/4 is a neat idea let down by soft optics and a build quality that's among the worst in our database. It's tempting as a first tilt-shift toy, but even at rock-bottom pricing, you're getting a lens that feels like a prototype. Hard pass for anyone serious about image quality.

Usage Scores

Macro (50.9)Overall (33.4)Budget (25.7)Street (29.8)Travel (15.5)Portrait (41.6)Landscape (25.9)Professional (35.4)Video Cinema (32.4)Wildlife Sports (18.3)

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