ExoLens Wide-Angle Zeiss Lens Review - MacRumors
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Review: ExoLens' Wide-Angle Zeiss Lens is Bulky, but Takes Distortion-Free Photos

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ExoLens and Zeiss have teamed up to create some high-quality lenses designed to take iPhone photography to the next level. At $200, the ExoLens PRO with Optics by Zeiss Wide-Angle Kit for the iPhone 7 and iPhone 7 Plus is almost the price you'd pay for a standalone camera, but the lens is distortion free, compact, and enhances the range of images you can capture with your iPhone.

exolensoniphone
There are dozens of inexpensive lenses on the market, but most of the cheaper options are unable to measure up to the quality you get with the $199 Zeiss/ExoLens combo.

Design

The ExoLens PRO comes in a padded box and ships alongside several mounts to fit different sized iPhones, including the iPhone 7, iPhone 6s, and iPhone 6s Plus.

Right out of the package, the ExoLens PRO stands apart from other lens options. It's over an inch tall and similar in circumference to a standard pill bottle, with a solid weight to it. The outside of the lens is made from aluminum, and the glass of the lens itself is protected with caps on each side when not in use. Zeiss branding is on the side of the lens, which looks more like a small DSLR lens than a standard iPhone lens.

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Inside the box, there are two carrying bags for the lens and any accessories, along with an aluminum lens hood and an installation guide.

The lens mount, which fits over the camera lens on the iPhone 7 Plus, features two pieces -- an aluminum outer mount and a softer gel liner. The two pieces are combined and then slipped over the camera side of the iPhone, a process that's quick and easy.

iphoneexolensback
Once the lens mount is in place, the ExoLens PRO can be screwed in place and it's ready to use. Despite its weight, the ExoLens PRO feels stable and secure on the back of the iPhone.

While the lens feels secure, it adds a lot of weight to the iPhone and changes the balance of the device. It's unwieldy to hold and I needed to use two hands when taking a photo. Even then, I was worried it would slip out of my hands.

exolenssize
The ExoLens PRO can't be used with a skin or a case on the iPhone, so there's no real way to add extra grip. The extra weight and bulk of the lens also makes it more difficult to carry -- it's not going to fit in a pocket, and it's awkward to use for other purposes with the lens attached.

It's not difficult to pull the lens off when it's not in use, but it's worth noting that this is a lens that you're only going to want to have on the camera for the express purpose of picture taking. There's a lot more on and off action needed than with smaller lenses like the Olloclip.

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The ExoLens PRO lens mount covers up the telephoto lens, so the lens itself only works with the standard iPhone lens. Since this is a wide-angle lens, that's not a surprise, but it does prevent 2x zoom and Portrait mode from being used while the lens is attached. It does not work with the front-facing camera and it also prevents the flash and the microphone from working properly when attached.

ExoLens has other lens mounting solutions for the iPhone 7, including the newly released $50 ExoLens Case, but the lens mount is the only option for the iPhone 7 Plus at the moment.

Lens and Picture Quality

The lens is a Zeiss Mutar 0.6x Asph T* wide-angle lens, which is an 18mm equivalent. That's wider than the default iPhone camera, which Apple says is 28mm.

exolenscomparison

With ExoLens on right, without ExoLens on left

At 18mm, the Zeiss wide-angle lens is ideal for capturing landscape shots or more of an indoor area, and there's an anti-reflective coating on the lens that seems to improve image quality when it's bright outside.

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ExoLens example shot

Pictures captured with the lens are as sharp and clear as those taken without the lens, and there is no distortion at the edges, a common issue with wide-angle camera lenses designed for the iPhone. I also saw no artifacts or color aberrations.

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ExoLens example shot

Bottom Line

This is something of a niche product, and to be honest, I'm not sure who it's targeted at. The average iPhone user isn't going to want to shell out $200 for a wider-angle iPhone lens, nor should they, and photographers who need a wide-angle lens likely have better camera equipment.

It's a well-built lens that produces high-quality images, but it isn't a whole lot wider than what you get with the built-in camera (18mm vs 28mm) and it's bulky and heavy, so it's not a great solution for most iPhone users.

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That said, it takes excellent photos, so if you're a person with $200 to spare and you take all of your photos on the iPhone and want to extend your range, this is a lens worth considering.

Pros:

  • Distortion free
  • Easy to put on/remove

Cons:

  • Expensive
  • Doesn't work with cases or screen protectors
  • Heavy
  • Adds a lot of bulk to the iPhone

How to Buy

The ExoLens PRO Wide-Angle Kit with a Zeiss Lens can be purchased from the ExoLens website for $199.95.

Note: ExoLens provided MacRumors with a ExoLens PRO with Optics by Zeiss Wide-Angle Kit for the purpose of this review. No other compensation was received.

Top Rated Comments

zorinlynx Avatar
116 months ago
Lenses last forever and don't become obsolete.

Phones quickly become obsolete after a few years.

Will they be selling mounting kits for future iPhones so you can keep using these expensive lenses into the future?
Score: 10 Votes (Like | Disagree)
116 months ago
I know these take really high end photos and the results are that of DSLR. But That looks a little ridiculous attached to the iPhone.
No, not the results of a DSLR. A DSLR has a much much much larger sensor and way better optics. This little lens looks cool, but all the light is still getting funnelled through a tiny iPhone lens and a really tiny sensor. It's all OK in the daytime, but at night you really start to see the difference.

I'm not knocking smartphone photography -- it's absolutely amazing, but there's only so much you can do with that compact of a camera.
Score: 5 Votes (Like | Disagree)
simonmet Avatar
116 months ago
It's misleading to say this is lens is distortion free. Not even the best lenses in the world claim that, especially wide-angle lenses. Lens distortion is not a check-box you tick either yes or no. There are different types and it varies from the centre point of an image. You simply cannot represent a spherical surface on a flat plane without some kind of compromise.

What the article probably means to say is that it has rectilinear correction (straight lines appear straight) and relatively low spherical distortion compared with other iPhone add-on lenses of its width. In other words, it's a premium version of this type of product. Even well rectilinear-corrected lenses still get volumetric distortion and perspective effects.

Saying "distortion-free" is market bollocks. It's misleading and incorrect and the author should clarify this for the benefit of readers who may not understand.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Fzang Avatar
116 months ago
Can't get rid of the noise though, which is the biggest problem with smartphone photography.
Score: 3 Votes (Like | Disagree)
emm386 Avatar
116 months ago
I can see a lot of uses for this, but not for general regular folk.
Joking aside and in all seriousness now:
What's the use case of this, really?

I myself am an amateur photographer and I take along my DSLR virtually all the time. Yes, it's not as practical as just taking your iPhone out of the pocket, but neither is handling this monstrosity.

And the picture quality and detail or control over the picture of seriously ANY cheap DSLR blows ANY phone's camera literally out of the water, even with crappy kit zooms.

There have only been a few cases using "real" cameras, where the camera's sensor was actually the limiting factor for me, rather than a decent lens or my photographic skills (or rather lack of them). But with the iPhone - Zeiss - combination, the pinhead-sized sensor of the iPhone would definitely be holding me back, even I am just an amateur/hobbyist.

So if this "thing" is limiting, even for an amateur photographer, it's fair to assume it's absolutely useless for a professional. And "general folk" as you put it, would probably (I think) not give a damn about a 200$ - strap-on.

So not to be mean or bashy, maybe I overlooked something, but really: WHO is target audience of this?
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)
Michael Scrip Avatar
116 months ago
This is a good point. Realtors (and those in similar professions) might indeed find this useful if they don't already use a DSLR/hire a professional for listing photos.
Yep... any serious real estate agent would hire a professional. :D

I've seen professional real-estate photographers spend 30 minutes working on one photo of a room in a house. They composite together multiple photos with different exposures... a mixture of flash and exterior sunlight... etc.

It's a lot of work... but boy do they look great.
Score: 2 Votes (Like | Disagree)

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