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You are listening to Adorama narrated a collection of our favorite blog posts presented in audio format. NISI Athena Prime Lenses Optical Performance Written by muji updated on February 6, 2026 this is part one of a three part deep dive into the NISI Athena Prime Lenses. Part two focuses on cinematic bokeh, creative characteristics and visual signature in Part 3 on Compact Cinema and on set efficiency. The NISI Athena Prime Lens series was first announced in 2023, disrupting the market with its combination of T1 9 speed and compact size. The full range was released in 2024. The lenses remain highly valuable in 2026 primarily due to their optical consistency and mechanical precision at a fraction of competitors prices. Their value lies in the timeless demands of cinematography, image sharpness and consistency across focal lengths and lens control. Small and surprisingly affordable, they also claim top tier optical performance.
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These lenses demand a technical examination to determine whether they still hold a place on professional film sets in the 2026 market. This article will dive into the technical specifications to review the optical performance of these lenses, which is crucial for an informed purchase. However, I encourage you to also read my non technical verdict and personal experience which I will share at the end. What defines a cinema lens and when is it useful? First, it is vital to understand why a cinema lens or cine lens is distinct from its photographic counterpart and when its use becomes non negotiable. Cine lenses enable smooth switching between focal lengths without causing color or exposure shifts. Therefore they are a popular choice for filmmakers who need a professional, controlled and consistent image. High quality cine lenses also have similar bokeh and sharpness in the entire lens set. This is crucial for projects like films, commercials and high end documentaries that require precise repeatable focus pulls and uniform appearance across all scenes even when shot on
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different days, making it the ideal choice
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for cinematography, especially for solo filmmakers like me.
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For run and gun projects like sports events or when time is limited, I
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use zoom lenses like the 24-70mm with
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autofocus to keep the gear lightweight without changing lenses. Cine Lens versus Photolens the Crucial Differences Unlike a photographic lens, a cine lens is explicitly built for filmmaking. The main difference is in the focus on mechanical and optical consistency, various components of an Athena prime cine aperture the cine lens advantage is that it is marked in T stops instead of F stops. Why that matters for filmmaking, T stops or transmission stops measure the actual light transmitted to the sensor, ensuring consistent exposure. When swapping lenses, aperture is controlled by the D clicked rings which allow smooth seamless exposure changes during A shot Focus the cine lens advantage is a long focus throw. This refers to the lens focusing mechanism, specifically the ring that is rotated to achieve manual focus. On cine lenses, the amount of rotation required to adjust the focus from the minimum distance to infinity is much more precise. They offer a longer rotation range for accuracy, typically 300 to 330 degrees. The focus ring has teeth or gears, but that mesh with a follow focus mechanism, enabling smooth, precise and remote adjustments. In the world of cinema, there is a specialized role known as a focus puller whose responsibility is to keep the subject in focus while the camera operator focuses solely on framing the shot. This is typically accomplished using a focusing mechanism attached to the camera rig and lens. As a solo filmmaker, I use a focusing mechanism like the DJI Focus Grip with LiDAR, which allows me to focus while operating the camera. The advantage of a cine lens in focus breathing is that the focus breathing is minimized or eliminated. Cine lenses prevent the view from subtly expanding or contracting as focus is adjusted, maintaining a smooth composition for consistency. The cine lens advantage is its color matched similar bokeh and weight. The results across the lenses are usually uniform in terms of color in and bokeh at various T stops. Their body shape and weight also allow for quick lens changes without adjusting focus motors, changing matte boxes or rebalancing gimbals. The NISI Athena Prime Technical Deep Dive Proof on the Pixel the lens is used for my projects. For my recent film project shot with Anisi Athena prime lenses, I use a lens set designed for the Sony E mount system. I filmed with the Sony A7S3 and for testing used a Sony A7R4 to capture images at various T stops, allowing me to zoom in and evaluate sharpness. The lenses that came in the kit were 14 mm, 25 mm, 35 mm, 50 mm and 85 mm. Although I initially planned to use the 35 mm, 50 mm and 85mm only for this shoot, I also incorporated the 25 mm for a few shots after discussing a few ideas with the Blacksmith. Full frame and Super 35 coverage all Athena lenses are designed to cover a full frame image circle 46 millimeters, meaning they easily cover smaller Super 35 APS C sensors with plenty of room to spare. Future proofing them for evolving sensor sizes. Optical Engineering Edge to Edge Sharpness the primary claim of the Athena lenses is their sharpness even even wide open at their maximum aperture of T1.9 T2.4 with 14mm testing at T1.9 wide open. The key test for a professional lens is performance at its widest aperture across the five core focal lengths, the Athena lenses exhibit remarkable center sharpness. Crucially, they maintain this detail edge to edge on full frame sensors. How to Test to accurately test a lens sharpness, a focus chart is used. The most precise method is mathematical. Rather than relying on the camera's focus peaking or visual estimation, mount the lens on a tripod and position the camera close enough to the chart to fill the frame. Using a measuring tape, measure the distance from the focus chart to the camera's focal plane, then record it. Dial Rotate the lens, focus throw or focus ring to this precise measure. Distance as the focus throw is clearly marked with distance measurements, ideally the resulting image should be pin sharp across the entire image. This is the true test of the lens's capability. Test each lens at various aperture values. The image below shows the center of the focus chart and the sharpness of the different lenses at their widest apertures. The center across all lenses at T1. Nine is sharp. The size inconsistency is due to cropping images. See this image in the blog post Athena Prime Lenses center sharpness across the focal lengths at T1.9 14 mm at T2.4 the results the Athena Primes provide consistent corner to corner sharpness, clearly placing them in the professional category with 14mm at T2.4 the widest and the rest of the lenses at T1.9 from the center to the edge of the frame provided sharp results. This didn't surprise me because before testing I had used these lenses for filming and many shots with different lenses required focusing on small instruments used by blacksmiths and ceramicists who were my models. Optical Engineering Excellence Taming the Light A cine lens must not only be sharp but also optically clean. Nisi's incorporation of advanced glass encodings is where the technical design truly shines. Chromatic Aberration Control NISI utilizes extra low dispersion and high refractive HR glass elements to combat chromatic aberration, I.e. color fringing and purple halos in high contrast. Testing Shooting bright reflective objects against a dark background or a harsh backlight, the control of color fringing is outstanding. During the tests, I found that the 35mm and 25mm lenses exhibit chromatic aberration. The cleanliness of the 85mm and 50mm surprised me as the result showed negligible fringing. The video below demonstrates chromatic aberration of the Athena Primes in action and you can see this video by clicking the link to go to the blog post. Athena Prime Lenses Chromatic Aberration across focal lengths. Here is a screen grab of the footage that makes the chromatic aberration more obviously Color Science and Matching Another essential element of a professional setup is color consistency. The lenses are closely color matched across all focal lengths, providing a neutral, high contrast look that requires minimal post production correction. While shooting the film projects with the Sony A7S III, using S log 3 across all scenes was a significant advantage. The absence of color differences across various focal lengths enabled easy, consistent color grading in the editing process. I used a color chart in my studio to test the colors. The vector scope in the editing software shows consistent colors across different focal lengths. When the scope screenshots are overlaid, they align perfectly. Athena prime lenses offer exceptional color consistency across all focal lengths as demonstrated in studio tests using a color chart. In this image, Vectorscope overlays on the merged image align perfectly, confirming there are no color deviations. You can see this example of the color test in the blog post. The video below demonstrates the conversion from log footage to REC709 and then to final color grading across two scenes shot with different lenses. See this video in the blog post. You'll find the links in the show notes Flare and Ghosting Characteristics Although engineered to reduce unwanted veiling, flare and ghosting, the Athena Primes exhibit flare when directly exposed to strong light. The video clip below shows a flare test at 14mm in a tight studio space that makes it look a bit harsh. However, when deliberately used in a planned shot, flares and ghosting can create a pleasing cinematic effect as seen in the footage from the pottery shoot below. See both videos in the blog post. Focus Control and Mechanics the mechanical operation is exceptionally smooth thanks to a long, precise 300 degree focus rotation and industry standard gears enabling simple, accurate focus pulls. This is a significant benefit, especially for shoots involving frequent lens changes. Without this consistency, I would have had to remesh the DJI focus motor with each lens change. The consistent placement of both the focus and iris rings across the entire lens set saves considerable time. For solo filmmakers shooting handheld, I recommend avoiding hand focusing unless absolutely necessary. The focus Ring's extensive 300 degree rotation, while precise, requires a significant hand turn to shift focus between subjects. This maneuver may result in missed shots or camera shake, especially when trying to manipulate multiple tasks of composition, camera movement and focus pulling all at the same time. To deal with focusing on my own projects, I built a camera rig shown in the video below, which included a mounted DJI focus grip. The grip is wired to a focus motor that connects to the lens focus ring. This way you still focus yourself, but utilize the focus motor to overcome the challenges described above. I use this setup for over 90% of my shots. You can see this video of a behind the scenes shoot using the DJI focus grip in the blog post. My verdict is Athena the Prime Lens Goddess Coming from a background of using photographic lenses from multiple brands for short films and photography, I found that the NISI Athena prime series is a significant technical advantage. Here are a few comments worth a complete Set if you're used to using photographic zoom lenses, it takes some time to get comfortable needing to switch lenses for different shots on your list. That said, the NISI set offers a wide range of focal lengths including 18mm T2.2 and 135mm to suit your various needs, making it easier to shoot in line with your creative vision, Consistent results and Editing the best part of watching the footage on the editing screen was that at a glance I couldn't make out which scene was shot with which lens. Specifically, the color accuracy, exposure, consistency, sharpness and bokeh at a shallow depth of field made it very easy to color grade and apply luts for cinematic effects. Handling Although time consuming, handling lenses was simple on set and you get used to it quickly. Their size and weight are similar so swapping lenses feels smooth in the hand Focusing if you come from an autofocus background, the shooting style changes, the process has to slow down and be deliberate. A focusing mechanism for this reason is an invaluable accessory. These lenses effectively incorporate the main features of premium cinema glass such as edge to edge sharpness, minimal chromatic aberration, negligible focus breathing and consistent color reproduction into an affordable compact system. In short, the Athena prime lenses remain valuable to professional videographers and cinematographers. At a good budget, they deliver professional grade optics providing a clean, perfectly controlled and consistent cinematic image capable of delivering. Athena prime lenses offer the technical reliability previously exclusive to much pricier equipment. They are unequivocally more than just good for the price. This has been NISI Athena Prime Lenses Optical Performance written by Muji Read for you by Nikki Haller for more posts like this, check out the 42West blog at adorama.com. blog links are in the show notes. Be sure to follow adoramanarrated on your favorite podcast app and leave us a review if you enjoy the content. Remember, create no matter what.
Podcast: Adorama Narrated
Episode: NiSi ATHENA PRIME Lenses: Optical Performance
Date: May 26, 2026
Narrator: Nikki Haller (blog post by Muji)
Source: 42 West blog by Adorama
This episode presents a narrated version of Muji’s in-depth review and technical analysis of the NiSi ATHENA PRIME cinema lens series. Aimed at both solo filmmakers and professionals, it analyzes whether, two years after their launch, these lenses can still compete in the rapidly evolving cinema lens market of 2026. The discussion covers their optical and mechanical performance, technical innovations, strengths, and real-world field usage, focusing on sharpness, color consistency, and usability on set.
Cinema lenses prioritize mechanical and optical consistency.
(01:24)
T-stops, not f-stops: Measure true light transmission for “consistent exposure when swapping lenses.”
Long, precise focus throw (300–330°) for exact manual focus and “smooth, precise, and remote adjustments.”
Color-matching, bokeh uniformity, and standardized size/weight for seamless on-set operation.
“Their value lies in the timeless demands of cinematography: image sharpness and consistency across focal lengths and lens control.” (00:53, A)
Performance at Wide Apertures
Maintains “remarkable center sharpness” even at T1.9 across focal lengths.
Consistent sharpness “from the center to the edge of the frame”—no visible drop-off.
“The Athena Primes provide consistent corner to corner sharpness… clearly placing them in the professional category.” (05:31, B)
Testing Process
35mm and 25mm exhibit some chromatic aberration; 50mm and 85mm show “negligible fringing”—impressive control over color halos, even in high-contrast conditions.
Video demonstration referenced (available on blog).
“The cleanliness of the 85mm and 50mm surprised me… showed negligible fringing.” (07:23, B)
Lenses are closely aligned in color rendition, providing a “neutral, high contrast look”—ease in color grading with minimal correction.
Vectorscope overlays (from edit suite) showed perfect color matching between lenses.
“The absence of color differences… enabled easy, consistent color grading in the editing process.” (08:41, B)
Exceptionally smooth focus ring (300° throw), industry-standard gears for follow-focus.
Consistent placement of focus/iris rings enables quick lens swaps “without having to remesh the DJI focus motor with each lens change.”
Advice:
Author’s rig: Used DJI focus grip wired to focus motor for ~90% of shots—behind-the-scenes video referenced.
“…The focus Ring’s extensive 300-degree rotation, while precise, requires a significant hand turn… may result in missed shots or camera shake…” (12:02, B)
On the Athena’s Value:
“The Athena Prime series is a significant technical advantage … a complete set offers a wide range of focal lengths … making it easier to shoot in line with your creative vision.” (13:54, B)
On Color Consistency:
“At a glance, I couldn’t make out which scene was shot with which lens. Specifically, the color accuracy, exposure consistency, sharpness, and bokeh at a shallow depth of field made it very easy to color grade.” (14:17, B)
On Handling and Focusing:
“If you come from an autofocus background, the shooting style changes, the process has to slow down and be deliberate. A focusing mechanism for this reason is an invaluable accessory.” (14:41, B)
Final Verdict:
“They are unequivocally more than just good for the price.” (15:46, B)
Narration concludes by encouraging listeners to read the companion blog for charts, images, and test footage linked in the show notes.