View fullsize ![1935 | NEX-7 & SEL55F18Z | 1/320s f/1.8 ISO100 55mm (35mm eq:82mm) ](/assets/images/e6c59-image-asset.jpeg)
1935 | NEX-7 & SEL55F18Z | 1/320s f/1.8 ISO100 55mm (35mm eq:82mm) 

Well, I made it 2 whole days (though just 1 shopping day) into 2014 without buying a new lens… though this lens was no impulse buy. It’s the new Sony FE (full-frame image circle E-mount) Zeiss Sonnar 55/1,8 lens  (model name: SEL55F18Z ). This lens has an MTF curve out of this world (stellar light transmittance, essentially - Zeiss have a white paper on the topic). In practice, this means that the lens has extremely high resolution and contrast “wide open” at its maximum aperture (opening). Designing a lens like this is no mean feat - I’ve never seen a curve like it. The lens outputs an image circle covering the size of a full-frame sensor, like my RX1, but I am currently using the lens on my trusty NEX-7.

View fullsize ![Is this my next camera? There's a full-frame sensor squeezed inside the miniscule Sony A7R.](/assets/images/76b6c-image-asset.jpeg)
Is this my next camera? There's a full-frame sensor squeezed inside the miniscule Sony A7R.

After purchasing the lens in Akihabara, we decided to go for a walk and test out the new lens. What better way to test a lens and camera than at night? :)

20140103-DSC08618.jpg

20140103-DSC08627.jpg

20140103-DSC08623.jpg

20140103-DSC08626.jpg

It’s probably a little early for a verdict, but overall, I’m very impressed. The high pixel density, cropped sensor (APS-C size) of the NEX-7 really tests the central zone of any lens.

![Sometimes it's easy to forget we're in Tokyo](/assets/images/8015f-20140103-dsc08628.jpg)
Sometimes it's easy to forget we're in Tokyo

There is a 50/1.8 lens, with optical stabilisation, already available for Sony E-mount cameras. It’s been around a couple of years. It’s maybe 1/3rd the price of this lens, but only covers the APS-C image circle, and thus would not be useful on any future full-frame camera. Rather than sink my money into a lens I’ll use (happily) until I “go full frame”, I decided to spend that little bit more, and “future-proof” myself with a world-class lens. 

20140103-DSC08629.jpg

And I have no regrets.