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SigmaLensReleased 2021Sony E

Sigma 35mm f/1.4 DG DN Art

Sigma 35mm f/1.4 for Sony E.

Reference-grade fast wide prime

Best for

StreetLow-light

Avoid if

One-lens flexibility

Typical price

$1,143.95

Snapshot of current retail. Check current pricing at retailers below.

Product Snapshot

Mount
Sony E
Focal length
35mm
Max aperture
f/1.4
Stabilisation
No OIS
Autofocus
AF motor
Weight
645 g
Filter size
Weather sealing
No
Released
2021-04

Quick Verdict

Best for: Street, Low-light

Not ideal for: One-lens flexibility

Biggest strength: Fast f/1.4 aperture

Biggest compromise: Single focal length

Detailed verdict & alternatives below

Jump to verdict

Quick verdict

Should you buy this?

Five-second read on who the Sigma 35mm f/1.4 DG DN Art is right for — and who should keep looking.

Best for

  • Travel work — 67/100 fit
  • prime shooters
  • f1.4 shooters
  • wide shooters

Not ideal if

  • video specs are your main buying reason

Main tradeoff

Stills-first strengths vs. video capability — the body is honest about what it is, but video-heavy creators will outgrow it.

Community insights

How owners actually use it

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Focal character

What 35mm f/1.4 actually does

Focal length is a lens's most decisive spec. Here's where this lens lives on the focal map and what its aperture unlocks.

The Sigma 35mm f/1.4 DG DN Art is a 35mm prime — one focal length, no zoom ring, no compromise on optics for flexibility. The wide-normal sweet spot — close enough to feel present, wide enough to keep context.

Max aperture of f/1.4 is the lens's headline feature. On paper, it gathers about four stops more light than an f/5.6 kit zoom — meaningful at every step from low-light handhold to shallow subject isolation.

Prime35mmf/1.4Sony E

Focal-length map

14mmUltra-wide
24mmWide
35mmWide-normal
50mmNormal
85mmPortrait
135mmShort tele
200mmTelephoto
400mmLong tele

645 g on the scale — comfortable hand-held weight; sling-bag friendly.

Rendering character

Primes typically optimise for a single focal length — sharper corners, smoother bokeh, lower distortion than a zoom in the same range.

Light & subject isolation

Wide-open performance is what you're paying for — strong low-light capability and pronounced background separation.

Carry profile

No OIS — pair with an IBIS body or higher shutter speeds for telephoto handheld work.

Use cases

Where it lands across real work

A practical fit-rating per workflow, derived from this product's specs alone.

Travel

Limited

Versatile zoom range + light weight + sealing — the travel-lens trifecta.

Portraits

Very good

Classic 50–135mm focal range plus wide aperture is the portrait recipe.

Landscape

Limited

Wide angle plus weather sealing is the landscape combination that matters.

Wildlife / sports

Not ideal

Reach is non-negotiable; OIS earns extra credit for handheld work.

Street

Very good

Compact 28–50mm primes are the classic street choice.

Video

Good

Stabilisation and a fast aperture are what video work asks of a lens.

Key strengths

What this product gets right

The practical wins — derived from the shipping spec sheet, not from hands-on testing.

Fast f/1.4 aperture

Wider aperture means more light, shallower depth of field, and faster shutter speeds — the single biggest creative spec on a lens.

Prime optical character

Primes typically optimise for one focal length — sharper corners and smoother bokeh than a same-range zoom.

Bright f/1.4 aperture

Outstanding sharpness

Compact 645g

Aperture ring + clicks

Main limitations

What it doesn't do well

Honest tradeoffs. Every line below is derivable from the spec sheet — no padded warnings.

Not weather-sealed

Fine for fair weather; pack a cover for events or rain alongside a sealed body.

Single focal length

No zoom flexibility — you reframe with your feet. Compositional discipline for some, a constraint for others.

Specs that actually matter

The numbers behind the verdict

The handful of specifications that actually move the buying decision — translated into practical terms.

Max aperture f/1.4

Fast aperture is the single biggest creative spec on a lens — wider opening for low light, shallower depth of field, faster shutter speeds.

Who cares: Portrait, event, and low-light shooters.

Form & coverage

What this lens can frame

Focal coverage from ultra-wide to super-telephoto, plus its widest aperture.

Focal length

35mm

Max aperture

f/1.4

8
16
24
35
50
85
135
200
400
800
Ultra-wideStandardSuper-tele

Wide — environmental, street, video.

Background separation

Strong subject pop

58/100 potential
sharp subject · blurred background

Illustrative — driven by the f/1.4 aperture and 35mm reach. Wider apertures and longer focal lengths throw the background further out of focus.

Ownership reality

What it's like to live with

Practical ownership — carry weight, accessory burden, upgrade path. Not a market-timing read.

Mount commitment

Sony E

Lenses are the longest-lived part of a kit. Mount choice locks in your future body options.

Carry weight

Manageable

Pro zooms add real weight to the bag; primes stay light.

Accessory needs

Filters, hood, cap

Plan for a UV/ND filter and the included hood; cleaning kit on top.

Owners

What owners actually think

Real-world consensus voted by the community — not spec-sheet numbers. Sign in to add your votes.

Community verdict

0 votes

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Owner consensus

From community votes · not specs

The owner consensus unlocks once enough community members have voted to avoid a false read — 6 more votes to go. Vote or review above to help it along.

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Best for

What the community shoots with this most.

No votes yet

Rendering profile

The lens optical signature.

No votes yet

Autofocus

Real-world autofocus performance.

No votes yet
Not rated

Low light

Real-world low-light performance.

No votes yet
Not rated

Value for money

Bang for the buck.

No votes yet
Not rated

Most loved

What owners praise.

No votes yet

Most complained about

Recurring frustrations.

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Share your experience

A 1-minute guided review — it also shapes the community consensus.

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FAQ

Quick answers

The questions buyers most often have at this stage of the decision.

What bodies is the Sigma 35mm f/1.4 DG DN Art compatible with?

The Sigma 35mm f/1.4 DG DN Art is a Sony E-mount lens. It works on any current Sony E body without an adapter. Cross-mount use requires an adapter and may compromise autofocus performance.

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