Sigma 65mm F2 DG DN (Sony E Mount)
Rokinon 12mm F2.8 ED AS NCS Fish-eye (Sony E Mount)
When comparing Rokinon 12mm F2.8 ED AS NCS Fish-eye (Sony E Mount) and Sigma 65mm F2 DG DN (Sony E Mount), which one is better?
These two lenses use the same lens mount, the Sony E. This means that both lenses are compatible with cameras that use this mount.
Winner: Tied
Regarding lens mount: Popular lens mounts are Canon RF and EF, Micro Four Thirds and Nikon Z. Different lens mounts lets you connect different lenses to camera bodies, but some might not be compatible. This can be helped by using an adapter, like a Canon EF to RF adapter.
Neither Rokinon 12mm F2.8 ED AS NCS Fish-eye - (Sony E Mount) or Sigma 65mm F2 DG DN (Sony E Mount) are anamorphic lenses.
Winner: Tied — Neither have this feature
Regarding anamorphic: Anamorphic lenses are usually used on cinema cameras and squeezes the image when its recorded, which gives the final, stretched out, image oval bokeh and a different angle of view. The most common lenses, however, are not anamorphic but spherical, which gives a spherical bokeh and is a much cheaper lens design.
Full specifications table of Sigma 65mm F2 DG DN (Sony E Mount) and Rokinon 12mm F2.8 ED AS NCS Fish-eye (Sony E Mount):
Sigma 65mm F2 DG DN (Sony E Mount) | Rokinon 12mm F2.8 ED AS NCS Fish-eye - (Sony E Mount) | |
Brand | Sigma | Rokinon |
Lens Mount | Sony E | Sony E |
Focal Length | Missing | 12 mm |
Largest Aperture | Missing | 2.8 |
Anamorphic | No | No |
Minimum Focus Distance | Missing | 20 cm |
Type | Missing | Prime |
Aperture Range | Missing | 2.8 - 22 |
Lens Front Diameter (Not Filter Thread) | 62 mm | Missing |
Lens Groups | Missing | 8 |
Lens Elements | Missing | 12 |
Image Stabilization | Missing | No |
Autofocus | Missing | Evet |
Macro | Missing | No |
Weather Seal | Missing | No |
Full Frame Coverage | Missing | Yes |
Lens Hood Included | Missing | No |