I'm loving this lens. Always regretted selling the 20mm F1.8G and never found myself a copy at a reasonable price.
Mine went for a whopping $450 AUD on eBay, which is like $310 USD. Could imagine how sad I was.
Been following this lens ever since it was announced, and Nikon was boasting about how the coma is well corrected. Saw some early reviews and I was already sold. Then comes a silly virus. It has been several months here in Sydney for the lens to show up at very high prices, and it's still out of stock pretty much nation wide.
So I decided to take Steve Perry's advice and called up several camera stores. I found one listed on ebay by some obscure "store" located in a mountain, which however is listed as an official Nikon distributor. Rang up the guy through a number I found through my search engine. The seller was incredibly nice, gave me the expected discount of 10% since we're cutting ebay out, he also offered me free express postage. Somehow he messed up the dedicated coupon, but let it go anyway even after I asked about it. I ended up paying $1500 AUD (US$1033) for the lens shipped, it was also the last copy! Destiny I guess.
This is such a lovely lens. It's really big, a lot larger and heavier than the 20mm F/1.8G. The G version feels like a lens cap when coupled with a D-SLR. The balance of the S-line version on my Z6 is almost perfect.
Thanks to the Queen, the lens landed on Tuesday rather than Monday. I headed out and straight up Sydney Tower to get some shots. Lots of annoying but necessary measures to prevent that silly virus from spreading, I salute the workers. Thankfully, the venue isn't nearly as packed as usual. I suppose the time slot system worked out nicely.
Anyhow, enough (unnecessary) backstory, here's the 2 processed shots. I'm no landscape/cityscape expert, but I quite like the results. Even through the thick glass and my light pollution filter, the lens did really well. My 24mm PC-E would have been devastated. I did take a sample photo to see if the lens lives up to Nikon's claim of coma suppression, but I won't include them. The photo was shot through thick glass and a filter, not a good test. However, from what I can see, the performance is incredible. Coma levels are very well controlled, the 20mm G version is unfortunately no match here, from my experience. No geese or ducks flying around the edges.
1600px photos. Visit my flickr for the usual stuff I do (microscopy)
https://www.flickr.com/photos/mcmicroscopy/with/49995737751/ Here's a 100%, I did downscale to 12MP.
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/49995122003_8d3d98e9c6_o.jpgAnd here's the 24mm PC-E. Not apples to apples, body is a D810 too.
https://live.staticflickr.com/65535/48481892896_0f1ce79645_o.jpgYou can see how well the 20mm S-line holds up, yet how detrimental the thick glass is to both lenses. There's some weirdness that becomes obvious when zoomed in.
I have several more to edit. I also plan on exploiting the lens' ability to focus very close to produce some macro-landscape like photos. When the rain stops and moon hides, I'll be heading out into some no-where places away from the biggest light polluter in the continent and enjoy from astrolandscapes fun! Love to see how the coma is controlled. I'll keep this post updated.