

📸 Capture your world wider, sharper, and with style!
The Fujinon XF18mmF2 R Black is a compact, lightweight wide-angle prime lens designed for Fujifilm X-mount cameras. Offering an 18mm focal length (27mm equivalent), a bright F2.0 aperture, and advanced 8-element optical construction including 2 aspherical elements, it excels in delivering sharp images with beautiful bokeh. Its 18cm minimum focus distance enables creative close-ups, making it a versatile choice for travel, street, landscape, and portrait photography.
| ASIN | B006ZSNRWO |
| Batteries | 1 Lithium Ion batteries required. |
| Best Sellers Rank | #434 in SLR Camera Lenses |
| Customer Reviews | 4.1 4.1 out of 5 stars (249) |
| Date First Available | January 9, 2012 |
| Is Discontinued By Manufacturer | No |
| Item Weight | 4.1 ounces |
| Item model number | 16240743 |
| Language | English, English, English, English |
| Manufacturer | Fujifilm |
| Product Dimensions | 1.33 x 2.54 x 2.54 inches |
K**N
My experience has been positive so far.
I purchased my Fuji XP1, 35mm, 60mm lenses from Japan in March and additionally purchased the 18mm lens from Amazon in May. I use to have Nikon D7000 DSLR, but high quality pro lenses were too pricey and heavy. I thought carefully of what I wanted. Since I'm not a pro and wanted something light for travel and high image quality is one of my top priority, I ultimately decided to switch to Fuji X Pro 1. Today, I'll be sharing my experience with 18mm f/2 lens, 35mm f/1.4, and the 60mm f/2.4 macro. -Fujifilm X-Pro1 18mm F2.0 Lens- This lens is the smallest, lightest, and the cheapest feeling lens out of the three primes that are released. Auto-focus seems faster or equal to Fuji's 35mm lens. Manual and aperture ring feels "disconnected" do to it being focus by wire design and not mechanical. The rubber lens hood cap, lens hood, and lens cap are poorly made. Long explanation short: it easily comes off. So I purchased the EzFoto 52mm Tilted Vented Metal Lens Hood and now it feels better (both now metal finish), looks better, and securely fits on to the lens. I purchased this lens primarily to cover my wide angle needs until Fujifilm releases their 10-24mm f/4 lens (planned for 2013). After using the lens though, I may keep this lens even after 10-24mm lens becomes released. The reason is because you can get really close with this lens (.18m) and at f/2.0, you can have the subject separated from the background even at this wide angle; furthermore, the bokeh is creamy and pleasant when you get it right. When focusing very close, slight change in angle would create an interesting composition/perspective for your photos. I think I would be keeping this lens for those creative shots. -Fujifilm X-Pro1 35mm F1.4 Lens- This lens is a must have for Fuji X Pro 1 user. Auto-focus seems slightly slower or equal to Fuji's 18mm lens. Manual and aperture ring feels "disconnected" do to it being focus by wire design and not mechanical. Similarly with 18mm lens hood accessories, I switched it for the EzFoto 52mm (Non-Tilted) Vented Metal Lens Hood. I purchased this lens primarily as a simple walk around lens for me. Sharp and usable from F/1.4 and the bokeh is creamy and pleasant most of the time. It gave me the similar experience I had with my Nikon 35mm f/1.8 DX lens, but with better bokeh quality (in my opinion). Rather than sharpness, the quality of the bokeh really changes the mood of a picture. In an extreme sense, I was never satisfied with Nikon 35mm f/1.8 lens because the bokeh wasn't to my liking. I also shot an environmental and studio portrait with Fuji 35mm lens and boy was I happy with my images. ("bokehlicious!") This may be trivial, but this lens can focus closer than Nikon's (.28m vs.3m). *The closer you can get, the shallower depth of field you get*. Couldn't be happier with this lens. -Fujifilm X-Pro1 60mm f/2.4 Macro Lens- This lens is the least used when I'm outdoors, but when I'm taking still life shots (indoors) this is the most used. Auto-focus is the slowest. Very difficult to auto-focus very close. However, I use this lens on tripod, set it to manual focus, and check my focus using the magnification function on the LCD for precise focus. Manual and aperture ring feels "disconnected" do to it being focus by wire design and not mechanical. Aperture ring, on my copy, actually feels a bit tighter than the other two lenses above. I purchased this lens, as I mentioned above, primarily for my still life shots. It gains 1/3 stop compared to most competition, but loses that 1:1 reproduction ratio (this lens has 1:2 ratio rating). It's a very sharp lens from wide open and produces creamy bokeh for "macro-close-up" shots. However, for portrait shots, I find the bokeh to be busy most of time and wouldn't recommend it. I would probably wait for the newly announced Fuji 56mm f/1.4 lens (planned for 2013) for portraits. Ultimately, if you understand why you are buying the lenses for, these lenses are all high quality glass and image quality definitely won't disappoint you!
J**.
Workhorse lens though not without shortcomings.
I purchased this lens new along with my XT1 two years ago. I've been a working professional photographer for the past 25 years or so; I'm no stranger to lenses and cameras. When it comes to the XT1 (and now XT2), this lens is on my camera more than any other lens. I use it as my walk around, travel and street photography lens. Overall, the lens is sharp, though sharpest at the center with a definite falloff towards the edges. Most people won't notice this and I only do if I'm pixel peeping up close. I tend to shoot wide open and place my subject at the center so the fall off in sharpness often works with me. Again, at the edges, you'll see chromatic aberration (little purple halos) if the scene is backlit. There's some distortion with this lens however that's easily corrected in Lightroom using the Lens Correction panel (I use the setting for the Nikon 28mm). The lens focuses consistently and fast. It's held up well the abuse that I give it. I don't baby camera or lens. The metal lens hood does a good job protecting the front lens element (though I use a filter to avoid scratches). This lens isn't the best of the Fuji bunch, but that doesn't mean that it's not a capable performer. t've exhibited printed work from my Nikon D810 with the latest Nikon 28mm side by side with the XT1 with 18mm and I can't tell the difference. If you're looking for a super sharp, technically perfect wide angle lens, this isn't the lens. For that, I'd go with the 14mm. Of course, it's a stop slower and double the money. (If you're a landscape photographer, the 14mm is a better choice all the way around.) Bottom line: Good lens for the money. Will work great for most people. If you're a pixel peeping snob, probably best to move on.
P**M
My favorite XF lens.
This lens is absolutely perfect for street and close quarters portrait work. 28mm wide angle equivalent few, with an f/2.0 aperture that's enough to create a nice background blur when you get up close to the subject. Beautiful color. Beautiful bokeh. Razor sharp. Best of all, incredibly small and light, makes an X-T1/2/3 body a ridiculously small package for carry-along work.
M**K
I bought this lens to use on my XE1. The lens is presented in a really nice box that makes the experience of the arrival and opening of the lens a real pleasure. The lens itself does not diminish this initial pleasure either; the lens is small, light weight and yet solid - it is one of the nicest lenses I have held; it is beautifully made. I have read some reviews online about the horrible lens hood; however, I really like it - it is made of metal and locks in place tightly, I keep it on all the time and I use the supplied rubber cover, rather than the lens cap, to protect the lens when not in use. The lens has the equivalent field of view of a 27mm lens and when set to, say f16 in manual focus and using the depth of field scale in the XE1 viewfinder, turns the XE1 into a good street camera because you don't need to focus to keep the subject in your set distance sharp. The small form of the lens helps in this regard too, it is neat, unobtrusive and light weight. Some online reviews describe poor focusing speed and while the lens does not focus as snappily as my Nikon lenses on my D700, but it's not slow either; place your focus point where there is some contrast and it locks on without problems. I am very happy with the results the lens produces, the bokeh is nothing to write home about, due to the focal length of the lens and the cropped sensor in the XE1, however the lens produces sharp results. I also own the Fuji 35 1.4 and they pair up well, with the 18mm giving the wider field of view for when you can't move any further back to get the scene in. Highly recommended.
D**K
Are you an enthuisast photographer with Fuji gear? Friends and family expect you to cover events and take "professional" photographs with your expensive camera? Stuck with the unwieldy 18-55 mm kit lens that you think is a dog, but unwillingly have to accept is a "excellent" lense because experts say so? Eyeing the X-100F longingly after buying the X-T3? This is your chance to add convenience to your expensive Fuji camera by spending more money, thereby making it as light and easy to use as a mobile phone camera. The 18 mm F2 works fine. As one of the reviewers said in an online review, one has to work with the lense. But the lightness, small form factor, fast aperture and wide coverage angle (~76 deg) are an advantage for both indoor (events, candid photography, pets, etc.) and outdoors (buildings, in our cramped roads). One surprising (I didn't think of checking this before buying) benefit of this lense is the very near focussing distance (~7 inches or so) that is good for taking closeups of crappy items bought off Amazon, fellow insects, poisonous flowers... if one is weary of the perspective distortion. I like it for its lightness, wide angle coverage and F2 aperture. It can share filters (and such) with the much more acomplished, slightly larger, 35 mm F1.2 lense. The lense hood looks cool, but takes away from the compactness of the whole package. But the downsides: it's slow, the focus is fly-by-wire and the aperture ring is grimy (on a brand new lense). It's also not water resistant, but this is not going to be a serious concern during our monsoons anyway. The lense hood had gouges and grind marks out of the box.
G**A
Ho messo da parte il 18-55 che avevo preso in kit con la X-E2 e l'ho sostituito con questo 18 fisso, leggero, luminoso, e soprattutto di dimensioni giuste! Piccolo quanto basta per rendere il tutto trasportabile anche in una tasca del giaccone. Dopo le dimensioni, la seconda cosa che si nota è che la messa a fuoco e un po più rumorosa del 18-55. La confezione è molto elegante e il paraluce è davvero bello (tranne forse il coperchietto di gomma, del paraluce stesso, che si rischia di perdere se non si sta attenti) Spedizione (arrivato il giorno prima del previsto) e imballo, secondo gli standard Amazon. Completamente soddisfatto.
J**Z
Excelente lente y muy buen precio
G**E
Petit, léger, monté sur un fuji x-e2s. Cela constitue un super kit de départ pour partir en,vadrouille. Il pique super bien a partir de f.3.2 jusqu'à f8/f10. Il ne faut pas hésiter à s'approcher pour des portraits ou des zooms. Un objectif parfait pour les paysages et pour le reste si on est pas,timide ;)