The Best Lenses for Night Photography: A Case for Rokinon Primes

What do you want in a lens for night photography? The most important factor is how much light a lens will let in so that we can shoot at lower ISOs– this means apertures of f/2.8 or greater (f/1.4 being preferred). Most zoom lenses only go to f/2.8 and, while they are perfectly okay for night photography, they are not the ultimate lenses to use.

Enter the prime lens! A prime lens is a fixed-focal-length lens that is designed to have much larger apertures. If you have looked into the major manufacturers’ primes (Nikon, Canon, Zeiss) you may be thinking I’m crazy right now because they are expensive! So I went on a search for lenses with the ultimate quality-to-price ratio.

rokinon lenses for night photography

Rokinons are among my favorite lenses for night photography.

Rokinon Lenses for Night Sky Photography

In this search I’ve become a huge fan of Rokinon brand lenses. These are also branded under Samyang, ProOptic, and Bower. They are all the same lenses, just with different names. Rokinon seems to be the more common name in the US.

The following lenses are relatively cheap compared to the pro-series Nikon or Canon lenses:

  • Rokinon 14mm 2.8
  • Rokinon 24mm 1.4
  • Rokinon 35mm 1.4
  • Rokinon 85mm 1.4

They also come in a cinema-friendly form factor. They have the same optics but the aperture is measured in T stops rather than F stops. However, they perform the same way:

  • Rokinon 14mm T3.1
  • Rokinon 24mm T1.5
  • Rokinon 35mm T1.5
  • Rokinon 85mm T1.5

Coma Considerations in Night Sky Photography

I know what some of you may be thinking: I want the highest quality lenses out there and I only buy the big manufacturers’ lenses because they’re the best! There’s a reason I recommend these other lenses. You may have heard of coma if you’re a pixel peeper but most people have never heard of it and, for most photography, it’s not something to worry about. When it comes to night photography, though, coma is especially important.

Below is an extreme example of what coma does to stars near the edge of the frame when shooting wide open. The image below was taken with the Nikon 50mm 1.8D, which does not have an aspherical element. The stars in this image are supposed to be points of light, not streaks!

photo of night sky with coma effect

An extreme example of what coma does to stars near the edge of the frame when shooting wide open.

Surprisingly, the Nikon and Canon versions of the 24mm f/1.4 produce coma as well. Below is a comparison of the Canon 24 f/1.4 and the Rokinon 24 f/1.4. From what I’ve read, the Nikon is even worse than the Canon!

photo of night sky shot with rokinon lens

A comparison of the Canon 24 f/1.4 and the Rokinon 24 f/1.4. Notice the more prominent “streaking” effect in the stars on the Canon image. ©Rick Whitacre

The great news about Rokinon? Almost no coma. The image below is a 100% crop from a corner taken with the Rokinon 14mm at f/2.8.

photo of night sky stars shot with rokinon camera lens

100% crop from a corner taken with the Rokinon 14mm at f/2.8.

photo of stars at night

Taken with the Rokinon 24mm at f/1.4. The slight blur is from being just out of focus. Don’t rely on infinity with this lens – it’s not accurate and you need to manually focus.

The quality of these Rokinon lenses continue to pleasantly surprise me.

If you’re on a budget or just getting started, I would recommend the Rokinon 14mm f/2.8 for shooting meteor showers, time lapse, and wide views of the Milky Way. Next, I would get the Rokinon 35mm f/1.4 if you’re interested in doing panoramas or tighter shots of the Milky Way. If you want to stick to Canon or Nikon-brand lenses, I recommend renting over buying.

One thing to note; the Rokinon lenses are all manual focus, a big reason for their lower cost. The good news? You can’t auto focus in the dark anyway! The best way to focus at night is using live view, zooming in on a bright star and manually focusing.

I recommend these budget lenses for any landscape or night sky shooter.

David Kingham is a nature photographer and leader of photo tours at Exploring Exposure. Originally from Colorado, Kingham lives and travels full time around the American West, pursuing his passion for landscape photography. David also shares his knowledge of photography through his eBooks and videos.

58 Comments

  • Marie Tylman

    Running out of time

  • Jackson H

    Any chance of updating this with Sigma 14mm f/1.8 Art Lens that came out in 2017 ?

  • Alexandria Huff

    One of these lenses will do the trick. These are all wide angles for awesome vistas but also with fast maximum apertures suitable for low light. Note, though, that they are manual focus only – totally great for night sky stuff, but might be cumbersome for other kinds of shooting.

    My personal favorite is the Zeiss 15mm. However, our most popular lens for this kind of shooting for F mount users is the Nikon 14-24mm. Just a classic, awesome lens.

  • Bill bradeley

    I have a Nikon D750. Traveling to Iceland and want a decent lens for landscape and northern light photography. Any suggestions?

  • davidkingham

    It sounds like you have the chipped version, which you need to set to f/22 and then use the the camera to change the aperture just like any other lens rather than using the aperture ring on the lens.

  • Joe

    I recently purchased the Rokinon 24mm/1.4 to use with my D5300. However even in manual mode, I keep getting an error notice when trying to change the f-stop on the lens and it will not shoot. It will only shoot with lens set to f22. Is there a fix?

  • Alexandria Huff

    Gotcha, I see what you’re saying. The receiving stations have sharpness target and Imatest charts but anything that is inconclusive then goes onward to repairs (and sometimes shipped out to the manufacturer).

  • Jonathan

    Thanks Alexandria. The article you linked talks mainly about microadjustments, which would not be applicable to a manual focus lens like the Rokinon. Are there any specific test done for de-centering (one side of frame sharp, other side not)? I hear that is a common problem with these lenses.

  • Alexandria Huff

    Our department of receivers hand-test each piece between orders and if they are not up to standards, then the item has to be reviewed by repairs. Of course, there are certain tolerances that are forgiven and those are different for each manufacturer. More on that here: https://blog.borrowlenses.com/microadjustment-for-lens-and-camera-frontback-focusing-issues/

  • Jonathan

    With regards to Rokinon/Samyang’s “less than stellar quality control” – how much testing does Borrowlenses do to ensure the copies sent out for rent are good and focus clearly at both center and corners?

  • David Kingham

    Sorry I don’t have any experience with that particular camera

  • Angela Lingle

    I own a Sony a55 and i take pictures of outdoor lighting at night. Is there a lens you would recommend?

  • David Kingham

    Samyang is exactly the same as Rokinon, you may also consider the Tokina 11-16 or 11-20

  • venomquasar

    Hello, I really enjoyed reading your article, very interesting. I just started into photography and I just managed to have a Nikon D5300, to start with. I am very interested in night photograhy but unfortunatelly here in czech republic it is hard to find these Rokinon, but, can you tell me what do you think, or someone here if have experience with it, about the Samyang brand Samyang 14mm f/2,8 ?? Thanks

  • Sartaj Randhawa

    The 2 Rokinons I’ve used, Canon and Nikon mounts, all had coma issues and a lot of smearing in the corners. Not pixel peeping, just fairly obvious on prints.

  • David Hussey (@David_A_Hussey)

    While its not quite as wide as I’d like for the Milky Way , I use a Sigma 18-35 f1.8 for wide field astro and aurora photos on a crop sensor body
    Superb image quality day or night, very reasonably priced

  • Matt Selby

    Interesting article, I currently shoot the MW with a Samyang 14mm 2.8 – but I’m thinking of replacing this with either the Nikon 14mm 2.8 or the Nikon 14-24mm 2.8

    I’ve seen some lovely shots on the MW with the 50mm but I can’t image I’d fit much in the frame @ 50mm here in the UK

  • Eric

    In regard to the 50mm f/1.8 G; An aspehrical lens element does not, by itself, correct for coma (actually saggital spherical abberation). An aspheric lens element is simply one tool in a lens designers toolkit. A single aspheric lens element can do the job that two lens elements provide (saving space, which either allows for greater correction with the addition of more lens elements, or makes for a smaller package). But, again, the presence of an aspheric lens element, does not by itself guarantee excellent correction for saggital spherical abberation. If this were the case, every lens containing an aspheric lens element would be great for astrophotography or night shooting.

    It all gets down to what the lens designer wants to accomplish.

    If one is looking for a great lens to shoot for night photography – I would recommend the new 58mm f/1.4 Nikkor, or the older 58mm f/1.2 Noct. Those two lenses were specifically designed to correct for saggital spherical abberation.

  • David Kingham

    I would go with the Tokina Russell, the 24mm is a bit too tight on a crop sensor for most uses

  • Russell

    I’m still wondering if Rokinon’s 24 1.4 will be wide enough for what I’m looking for on APS-C format. with a 70D, the new Tokina 11-20mm F/2.8 PRO (preorder) on the horizon, I wonder if it will be a nice go to lens for us cropped guys

  • Alexandria Huff

    The Rokinon 14mm f/2.8 ED AS IF UMC E Mount will.

  • Eric

    Hey you guys should update this post! I just got my Rokinon 24mm f/1.4 in the mail but I think I’m going to return it because now I’ve found the Sigma 18-35mm f/1.8 ($819) that has autofocus and apparently has excellent image quality over the full zoom range, and is only half a stop less than the Rokinon. Wish I has known about the Sigma sooner!

  • Pete

    Does the Rokinon 14mm Cine lens mount directly on a Sony A7?

  • Dave

    Yes, when I zoom in on the moon or anything like that and make it bigger it gets super super blurry so on a reg lens I would take the fine tuner focus and focus it on in on the subject or af it but I can’t seem to do it on the big 500…. maybe I didn’t do the stop button correctly though… I could try and af focus on it and get the clarity right and then hold the af stop button and turn the zoom back out to enlarge the moon in the finder and see if that works…

  • Alexandria Huff

    Have you already tried the AF Stop Button to freeze the AF where you want it before it gets to the point of focusing on the moon?

  • dave

    recently bought a canon ef 500… very expensive. I am used to using a zoom like the canon ef 300… when I use the 300, I zoom in on something and then tap the shutter to af it clearly and can choose any distance to af it… anyway, that’s what I’m used to… same thing with my fish eye, my wide angle, etc.
    with the 500, which is amazing, if I zoom in on the moon lets say to make it larger but all blurry and then tap the shutter to af, it af’s great but shrinks it right back to small to focus it… it does this on any distant object I’m shooting… it that the way it is supposed to work or am I doing something wrong? With the 300 the length of the lens goes in and out and changes whats within the frame, with the 500 the frame never changes it just af’s on whatever you point it at only with no zooming in or out…. it does it perfectly but I think maybe I have a setting wrong or don’t know how to work the zoom properly… I’ve read everything on line I can find but can’t find anything super relevant to my question….

  • David Kingham

    There is no difference in sharpness

  • Sarah Anderson

    Thanks so much for the review. Do you know if there is a difference in sharpness (or any other performance variables) between the Nikon AE and Nikon non-AE Rokinon 14 2.8 versions?

  • Greg Rodgers

    No mention of using a telescope-type mount with motors set to rotate the camera with the motion of the earth to eliminate tailing in starts and other celestial bodies. Seems that would allow for much longer exposures and reduce the need for high iso/wider appertures. Anyone into that?

  • Greg Rodgers

    Hi Todd, thanks for info about TS lens. I have only used one once for interior architectural shots and appreciated the ability to adjust for keystoning. but didn’t use it wide open as DOF wouldn’t have been sufficient. Seems that by tilting the lens with respect to the sensor, off-axis focus at wide apperture would suffer more – yes?

  • David Kingham

    Hi Amberly, I just updated my gear page to include some options for Pentax http://www.davidkinghamphotography.com/gear/lenses#APS I would go with the Sigma 18-35 and maybe a fisheye!

  • Amberly W.

    nothing for k-mount/pentax out there?, i’d love to get into astrophotography with my kr or k5..

  • Scott Martin

    FWIW, for long exposure ‘star trail’ work the aperture is considered the primary “star gathering” variable. Larger apertures will gather more stars while smaller captures gather few to none. So for example, f2 gathers a visually overwhelming amount of stars, while f22 won’t gather any at all. I find the sweet spot for my liking to be at f7. For this kind of shot we’re always at lot ISOs so we can extend the exposure and get clean results. Because the ISO is always low and the shutter doesn’t matter with the moving stars, the aperture is the primary variable that effect how many star show up in the final shot.

    For ‘star points’ and ‘galactic sky’ shot like David mentions, high ISOs and large apertures are required to gather as much light as possible within ~20 seconds before the stars start to trail. Lots of lenses cause the stars to bloom into seagull looking shapes when wide open around the edges so something like f3.5 is a safer bet. SO just like daytime photography the difference between an f3.5 lens and a f1.2 lens can be that the f1.2 lens is much cleaner at f3.5. Just because a lens is super fast doesn’t mean you always want to shoot wide open – you often don’t!

  • David Kingham

    Hey Brandon, for that particular type of night photography you are correct. My style is to shoot in very dark sky locations that have no light pollution to photograph the milky way, if I want stars that are not moving the shutter speed is limited to 20-30, therefore I need very high iso’s and big apertures, long exposures are not an option in this case.

  • Brandon Jennings

    Forgive me for asking a dumb question…but don’t you still want a lens that puts everything in focus at night? I’ve shot a lot of night stuff, and shooting cityscapes seems better with at least f/8 to f/16 for everything to be crisp and in focus. Of course, this is cityscapes I’m shooting (NYC etc.) I’ve also done some night sky photography, and it seems like I just left the shutter open longer with an ISO of f/8 or more.
    I have some really fast glass and I would love to shoot more night shots, but I just thought such a narrow depth of field of a lens at f/1.4 or f/1.8 would throw things out of focus, even though they are great for low light.
    Just wondering,
    Brandon

  • William Nourse

    I’ve used the Tokina 11-16mm with my Canon 60D to good effect:

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/wnourse/9485759577/

  • Scott Martin

    Totally with you on that Todd.

  • Todd Lambert

    Best I’ve found and one that use routinely is the 17 TS-E. Sharper than any of the lenses mentioned by a good mile and being able to control perspective really really helps when trying to include a foreground element in your night photography.

    Nowadays, with the high ISO capability of newer bodies, using an F4 lens is not the problem that it once was. For that reason, I tend to use the 17 TS-E more and more and my fast 1.4 glass less and less.

  • David Kingham

    No it won’t affect the quality, if anything it would be better

  • Charlton

    I have the Canon T2i. I am going for the Tokina 11-16mm since it is what you recommended for the ASC types. However, what would be the result if I used a lens for a full frame on the T2i for Milky Way shots? I would like to keep my options open if I decide to upgrade to a full frame in the near future. I know it knocks the frame size down a bit but does it affect the clarity of the photo? Thanks.

  • David Kingham

    Hi Fabio, you may want to talk to my friend Jason Hatfield http://www.mountainskyphotography.com/ he is a Sony shooter and loves his zeiss lenses (I have no experience with Sony)

  • David Kingham

    I’m going to assume you know these are manual focus lenses?

    Often you can get a bad copy of these lenses due to less than stellar quality control. Do some controlled tests on a tripod, if you cannot get anything in focus then I would return the lens for a replacement.

  • Fabio Machado

    Thanks for the advices David! You told about the Nikon’s 14-24 f/2.8 and 24-70 f/2.8, but do you have any recommendations for Sony A-mount users? Are the Zeiss the best solution?

  • Robyn Harold

    I have a question, though, about the Rokinon lens. I bought it, and it has NEVER focused for me, no matter what I do. I have no idea how to get it to focus. Every time I think I have a good shot, it comes out blurred, and it drives me crazy, so I never use it. Any advice would be great, because I’d love to be able to actually be able to use it.

  • David Kingham

    I’m excited for the Samyang 24mm tilt shift to come out, I’ve been wanting to use TS for night photography for awhile but the costs are too prohibitive. I agree that Zeiss lenses are phenomenal as well, but again too pricey for most.

  • Scott Martin

    IMO, the best lenses for NPy are Canon and Nikon’s shift tilt lenses, and the Zeiss primes. I do wish Zeiss would make some shift lenses…

  • Frank Davis

    I’m proud to say I’m the owner of the Rokinon 14, 24, 35, and 85mm Prime Lenses. I had the 8mm but took it back due to the fact that I’d rather use a 15mm fisheye on a Full Frame for fisheye shots (so you can can take the entire image in). But that 24mm is phenomenal especially for DSLR filmmaking.

  • David Kingham

    Thanks for the info 2muchsnow!

    nerdybails, that was a really tough choice, I couldn’t decide which to recommend. They both have their place and I think I probably use my 24mm more than the 35mm. Ultimately I decided to recommend the 35 based on the price for someone starting out and is generally better for panoramas. I think you should have both though 🙂

  • nerdybails (@nerdybails)

    You suggest the 14mm 2.8 and then shoot straight to recommending the 35mm 1.4, may I ask why the 24mm 1.4 wasn’t in the mix? That seems like a good compromise between the width of the 14mm but with faster glass.

  • Zane

    That Tokina 11-16mm 2.8 is a very popular aurora shhoting
    lens up here in Alaska. I use it on my Canon and really like it alot.

  • 2muchsnow

    I can give you some thoughts on the Nikon 35mm 1.8g. It does a great job, but the only thing it lacks is the ability to show you where/when you are manually focused at infinity, No guide on the lens, So for astrophotography/star trails, you have to test/check focus until you are dialed in.

  • Tom

    For those of us that are Sony DSLR users, the Maxxum 50mm F1.4 or 50mm F1.7 should be considered. The F1.4 sells for around $175.00 and the F1.7 for around $75.00 and they will communicate with the Sony Alpha body.

  • pmrphoto

    I love my Rokinons and use the 35 f/1.4 and 85 all the time in my video work. I also have the 8mm which I sometimes use for video if I need a super-wide… Very nice stuff, & great build quality too…

  • Rick Whitacre

    My complete comparison of the Rokinon 24mm f/1.4 versus the Canon is here:

    http://www.flickr.com/photos/ricoshanchez/sets/72157629651746163/

    Thanks for the post, David! I love my Rokinon and don’t miss the coma from my Canon lens at all

  • David Kingham

    They are exactly the same Tom, it’s just a marketing experiment by Samyang http://fstoppers.com/samyang-optics-unusual-three-brand-market-testing

  • chapaboy

    They are exactly the same thing. they just slap their brand on them.
    http://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/samyang/35mm-f14.htm

  • Tom Molczynski

    I’ve always loved the Canon 24mm f/1.4, because I shoot in low light a lot and on a Canon 7D crop sensor, the DOF is still pretty big even wide open, so I keep renting it for jobs, because I simply can’t buy it yet. This seems like a good alternative, for me. $700 for the 24mm at b&h, but now I can’t decide: Samyang vs Rokinon vs Bower – they sell all 3! Got anything that would push an undecided buyer towards one of them? I did see that you mention they are all the same lens, but does that mean just the design is the same, or the parts are the same? Are they built in the same factories? I would really appreciate more info. Thanks!

  • Cody Black

    the lens Tokina 12-24 F4 Pro Dx is great http://500px.com/photo/21991663
    the kit lens is alright http://500px.com/photo/16433421

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