The portrait turned out wonderfully! Because of the quality of the lens, you may take pictures of people, nature, and even just indoors without having to use a flash. Exhibits, animals, and museums are just some of the things that may be captured with this lens that are impossible to capture with a flash. Check out the album titled "Test Nikon D90 + Nikkor 50mm AF f/1.4D" for additional information. It contains sample photos taken with both cameras. Some pros: 1) Aperture. When set to f/1.4, the image is blurry in the far distance but has a pleasing appearance and is sharp in the foreground. 2) Sharpness begins at f/2.0 and continues! 3) Metal bayonet 4) Although focusing is quick with the Nikon D90, tracking focus is not quite as quick as it is with AF-S lenses, of course. I was unable to see any significant drawbacks. 1) Expensive with comparison to fellow f/1.8. 2) You will need to keep a firm grip on a rather short lens almost to the very end, and when focusing, the front ring will spin (the screwdriver will operate), but there is nothing you can do about this; it is merely a reality and not a disadvantage, and you will quickly become accustomed to it. 3) Chromatic aberration, as well as red and blue borders, can also occasionally be seen; however, all of these flaws can be fixed in Photoshop, and I have only seen them show once so far. 4) The autofocus on my Nikon D90 occasionally misses, even little, and the resulting picture is blurry; if you manually twist the ring by 1-2 millimeters, your finger will hurt. (but more than anything else, this is a claim to the fotik)
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