Vintage Minolta lenses on Fuji GFX

May 2023

So the Leica lenses didn’t work so well for me on the FUJI GFX, so I looked for other options. I found some guy mentioning old Minolta lenses in a discussion. I was lucky that some of the lenses named were available at Keh.com – so the only other thing I needed was an adapter.

Oh my, who would have thought that this will be the trickiest part of the whole story, but I found one on amazon, I will give you the link, since I tested quite a few and this one was the only one that fitted tight and works perfectly.

But lets name the lenses first that I ordered:

  • Minolta MC Rokkor 58mm F1,4
  • Minolta MC Rokkor 55mm F1,7
  • Minolta MD Rokkor 45mm F2
Minolta Linsen und Adapter

Using 35mm lenses on Medium Format brings different view of field, since the sensor is bigger. So our

  • 58mm turns to a 46mm
  • 55mm turns to 44mm
  • 45mm is around 35mm
>

The best thing first: all these lenses cover the whole sensor, and they are crazy cheap – if you find them!

Minolta MC Rokkor 55mm F1,7

Lets start with my personal favourite!

On the plus side we have:

  • tack sharp in the middle
  • lovely bokeh
  • small and light
  • only little vignetting
  • vintage look & colours


Downside:
  • Skincolours can be a bit shifted into greens
  • creates some „swirl bokeh“ at certain distances

Portrait eines jungen Mannes aufgenommen mit einer alten Minolta Linse
1: Unedited, out of cam / 2: slightly edited, converted to BW
Portrait einer jungen Frau aufgenommen mit einer alten Minolta Linse
1: Unedited, out of cam / 2: slightly edited
Portrait einer Frau in einem gelbem Kleid
The swirly bokeh in the corners…
Portrait einer Frau in einem gelbem Kleid
And its gone. Same lens, different distance. I personally find it rather interresting than disturbing.

The 55mm works extremely well for portraits, if you have time to focus – its of course manual. But with the Fuji I nailed 99% of my images.

I wouldn’t use it for landscape work, or architecture since it lacks a bit resolution and microcontrast, but its perfect for street and portraits.

Minolta MD Rokkor 45mm F2

The street king. Great for low light or if you want to shoot 35mm-ish portraits.

  • tiny and sharp!
  • vignettes abit more
  • very cheap (around 40 bucks)
  • no smeared corners, no swirl bokeh
  • bokeh can be busy

Junger Mann in der Wiener Innenstadt

Minolta MC Rokkor 58mm F1,4

  • a bit soft (dreamy) at F1.4
  • low contrasts at F 1.4
  • best corner performance from all tested lenses
  • bigger and heavier than the other lenses, but still small on the Fuji GFX
  • pricier (something around 100 bucks)

I have to say it is somehow my least favourite lens from those three, and I havent used it at a shooting so far. Only a few test shots. What I don’t like, is the „dreamy“ look at F1,4 – even if you nail the focus, details look a bit blurry, washed or dreamy as I would say. The 55mm somehow does a better job capturing details such as hair, eyes, skin structure and eyelashes. I know, Its complaining about first world problems. Despite of this, the bokeh is lovely!

>
Portrait einer jungen Frau aufgenommen mit einer alten Minolta Linse
1: Unedited, out of cam / 2: slightly edited
Foto zeigt einen Ausschnitt eines Fotos, Gesicht einer Frau
Dreamy Character at F1,4. It lacks contrast and details, sharpness is razorthin but quite good!

However my copy of this lens is not the best, also the focusring is quite severe. So I would rather recommend getting the 55mm or the 45mm if you like it wider. If you can, lay hands on the 58mm F1,2 (!) This is told to be the king of all Rokkor Lenses. I have no experience, but read a lot about the crazy quality of this beast.

Finally the Adapter

Foto zeigt die Fuhi GFX mit einem Adapter und einer alten Minolta Linse

I found it on Amazon, and it works perfect. I ordered three different types, and the third one worked percetly and costed under 50 Euro. So I kept it. Somehow it is permanently sold out, but this adapter linked here is exactly the same, from a different brand. It sits tight and mounts pretty good.



Get the Minolta MD to GFX Adapter here

Final words:

Its incredible how good those old Minolta lenses have been engineered. SLR Lenses from the 70ties and 80ties that fully cover a medium format sensor, and you can get them for very little money. If you find some old minolta lenses at your local dealer - especially those faster prime lenses, like the 55mm, 58mm, and 85mm, go and try them on your Fuji. Of course, technically they cannot compete with Fuji's GF Lenses, but they offer a quite unique look and feel.