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Lensbaby Optic Kit

 & Jim Fisher Principal Writer, Cameras

Our team tests, rates, and reviews more than 1,500 products each year to help you make better buying decisions and get more from technology.

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If you want to get creative and have some fun with your photos, the Lensbaby Optic Kit lets you add plastic, single glass, and pinhole/zone plate optic modules to your Lensbaby lenses. - Lensbaby Optic Kit
3.5 Good

The Bottom Line

If you want to get creative and have some fun with your photos, the Lensbaby Optic Kit lets you add plastic, single glass, and pinhole/zone plate optic modules to your Lensbaby lenses.

Buy It Now

Pros & Cons

    • Includes three lenses.
    • Compatible with Lensbaby Optic Swap system.
    • Optics may have limited appeal.

Lensbaby Optic Kit Specs

Type Lens

If you're looking to add some extra optic modules to your Lensbaby system, the Optic Kit ($100 direct) may be the first place you look. It includes the Plastic, Single Glass, and Pinhole Zone Plate optics. Each can be used with any Lensbaby camera lens that supports the Optic Swap system. This includes the Spark, the Muse, and the Composer Pro

If you already have a Lensbaby with a Double Glass Optic, you'll likely have a hard time justifying the purchase of the Single Glass Optic. I personally like the look of the Single Glass lens with an f/4 aperture disc, but at wider apertures—without an aperture disc it is an f/2 lens—it is extremely soft. Once you've stopped it down to f/4, the images are very close in character to those captured by the Double Glass, only with a bit less contrast and sharpness and more chromatic aberration in high contrast areas.


Final Thoughts

If you want to get creative and have some fun with your photos, the Lensbaby Optic Kit lets you add plastic, single glass, and pinhole/zone plate optic modules to your Lensbaby lenses. - Lensbaby Optic Kit

Lensbaby Optic Kit

3.5 Good

If you want to get creative and have some fun with your photos, the Lensbaby Optic Kit lets you add plastic, single glass, and pinhole/zone plate optic modules to your Lensbaby lenses.

Get It Now

Buy It Now

About Our Expert

Jim Fisher

Jim Fisher

Principal Writer, Cameras

My Experience

Images, and the devices that capture them, are my focus. I've covered cameras at PCMag for the past 14 years, which has given me a front row seat for the changeover from DSLRs to mirrorless cameras, the smartphone camera revolution, and the emergence of drones for aerial imaging. I have extensive experience with every major mirrorless and SLR system, and am also comfortable using point-and-shoot and action cameras. As a Part 107 Certified drone pilot, I’m licensed to fly unmanned aircraft systems (UAS) for commercial and editorial purposes, and am knowledgeable about federal rules and regulations regarding drones.

The Technology I Use

I use all of the major camera systems on a regular basis, swapping between Canon, Fujifilm, L-Mount, Micro Four Thirds, Nikon, and Sony systems. I still find time to use Leica M rangefinders and Pentax SLRs on occasion, too. I keep an iPhone 13 in my pocket for the rare occasions I'm not carrying a camera.

I'm not a brand-specific photographer. For product review photos, I swap between a Canon EOS R5 and a Sony a7R IV. I use Flashpoint and Godox TTL lights and Peak Design tripods, and I most often reach for a Think Tank or Peak Design backpack to carry equipment.

When it comes to computers, I'm an unapologetic Mac person and have been for the past 20 years. I write in Pages and use Numbers for spreadsheets. I currently swap between an Intel i9 MacBook Pro and an Apple Silicon Mac Studio for writing and use a calibrated BenQ 32.5-inch with the Studio for photo and video editing. I rely on a LaCie 6big RAID for media storage. I also keep a PC around for gaming, but please don't tell my Macs about it; they'll get jealous.

I split time between several different software apps depending on the type of editing I'm doing. For Raw image processing, Adobe Photoshop Lightroom Classic is my standard. I pair it with a LoupeDeck CT console to supplement my keyboard and trackpad, and I lean on RNI All Films 5 presets when I want to give an image a film look. I use Apple Final Cut Pro for video editing.

My first digital camera was the Canon PowerShot Elph S200, and my first DSLR was the Pentax *ist DL. I have a soft spot for antique film gear. I still use a 1950 vintage Rolleiflex Automat TLR and love trying mid-century Leica lenses on film and digital alike. I mainly use whatever's in front of me for review for digital snaps, but I pick up either my Leica M Typ 240 or Pentax K-3 III Monochrome when I want to step away from review work. In my downtime, I enjoy bird watching, reading, video games, and both good and bad movies, especially in the sci-fi and horror genres.

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