Pekka Buttler, 02/2026

Specifications
The table below summarises the lens’ key specifications (measurements based on pictured sample):
| Brand: | Miranda | Lens name | 1:1.8 f=50mm Auto |
| Focal length(s)1 | 50 mm | Angle-of-view2 | 47 ° |
| Maximum Aperture | f/1.8 | In Production | 1968–72 |
| Lens mount (this lens) | Miranda | Mount subtype | Auto aperture but no aperture coupling |
| Length3 | 41,3 mm | Diameter4 | 58,1 mm |
| Filter ring diameter | 46 mm | Weight | 203 grams |
| Lens element count | 6 | Lens group count | 4 |
| Aperture blades (S/R/C)5 | 6 S | Focus throw | 290 ° |
| Minimum focusing distance (indicated) | 43 cms | Maximum magnification (calculated ) | 1:7 |
| Has manual aperture ring | YES | Has Manual focus ring | YES |
| Aperture mechanism type | Automatic | Aperture click stops 6 | 1.8–2.8-4-5.6-8-11-16 |
Further notes:
• Miranda was – in its heyday – an advanced Japanese camera manufacturer. You can read more about Miranda camera in the JAPB company profile on Miranda camera.
• This lens came as the kit 50 with several generations of Miranda cameras, starting with the 1968 Miranda Sensomat before being replaced with the Miranda Auto E 50/1.8 in 1972.
• At this stage Miranda was offering two families of technologies: lenses that used an external aperture coupling arm to communicate the selected aperture to a compatible body (automex series and sensorex series) and lenses that in no way communicated the selected aperture to the camera body that relied on stop-down metering (f-series, g-series and sensomat-series). In many sources these are abbreviated and called the ‘sensorex’ and ‘sensomat’ series respectively. This lens is of the later type.
• See a run-down of Miranda nifty fifty lenses below.
• Importantly, Miranda was a camera manufacturer and not a lens manufacturer. This mean that from early on, Miranda cameras came equipped with various brands of lenses, including some rather prominent manufacturers such as Kowa and Zunow.
• Lenses branded as “Miranda” or “Soligor Miranda” were not manufactured by Miranda, but were sourced from other manufacturers and branded ‘Miranda’. Most often these lenses were sourced from Miranda’s long-time partner (and later: owner) Soligor (Allied Impex Corporation). Hence, the actual manufacturer of “Miranda” lenses is most often impossible to discern with certainty.
Versions/variants
The table below summarises the development of Miranda 50 mm f/1.8 and f/1.9 lenses.
For more information on generations of Miranda lenses, see the Miranda lens compendium.
| Mainline spec | Years | Generation | Recipe | MFD | Filter | Length | Diameter | Weight | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 50 mm f/1.9 | 1959–60 | PAD | unknown | 0,45 m | unknown | unknown | unknown | unknown | 7 |
| 50 mm f/1.9 | unknown | PAD | 6e / 4g | 0,45 m | 46 mm | unknown | unknown | unknown | 8 |
| 50 mm f/1.9 | 1960–63 | MEX-REX | 6e / 4g | 0,43 m | 46 mm | 42 mm | 58 mm | unknown | Soligor Miranda 9 |
| 50 mm f/1.9 | 1964–70 | MEX-REX | 6e / 4g | 0,43 m | 46 mm | 42 mm | 58 mm | unknown | |
| 50 mm f/1.9 | 1963–68 | F-G-MAT | 6e / 4g | 0,43 m | 46 mm | 42 mm | 58 mm | 193 g | [data sheet] |
| 50 mm f/1.8 | 1970–74 | MEX-REX | 6e / 4g | 0,43 m | 46 mm | 47 mm | 59 mm | 235 g | 10 |
| 50 mm f/1.8 | 1968–74 | F-G-MAT | 6e / 4g | 0,43 m | 46 mm | 42 mm | 59 mm | 203 g | (this lens) |
| 50 mm f/1.8 | 1972–74 | E | 6e / 4g | 0,43 m | 52 mm | 47 mm | 59 mm | 235 g | |
| 50 mm f/1.8 | 1974–76 | EC | 6e / 4g | 0,43 m | 49 mm | 43 mm | 60 mm | 218 g | [data sheet] |
| 50 mm f/1.8 | 1974–76 | DUAL | 6e / 4g | 0,43 m | 52 mm | 51 mm | unknown | 226 g |
Adapting
This lens cannot be used natively on any current SLR or dSLRs. To use it in its native environment, you will need a Miranda Camera film body. While this lens will mount on any Miranda camera that uses the Miranda mount, its automatic aperture stop-down will work only on Miranda bodies after the Miranda F (launched 1963).
Thanks to being a fully manual lens (manual aperture, manual focus), the lens can be adapted to all mirrorless cameras using a suitable adapter. However, Miranda adapters are not as easily available as adapters for many other legacy era camera mounts, nor is there a wide variety of specialist adapters.
Using Canon FD lenses on dSLRs is a theoretical possibility. Thanks to the relatively short flange focal distance of the Miranda mount (at 41,5 mm, clearly shorter than that of any full-frame dSLR mount), any adapter will necessitate some corrective optics to achieve infinity focus.
Footnotes
- Focal length is (unless stated otherwise) given in absolute terms, and not in Full-frame equivalent. For an understanding of whether the lens is wide/tele, see ‘Angle-of-view’. ↩︎
- Picture angle is given in degrees and concerns the diagonal picture angle. Rule of thumb:
> 90 ° ==> Ultra-wide-angle
70–90 ° ==> Wide-angle
50–70 ° ==> Moderate wide-angle
40–50 ° ==> ‘Standard’ or ‘normal’ lens
20–40 ° ==> Short tele lens
10-20 ° ==> Tele lens
5-10 ° ==> Long tele lens
< 5 ° ==> Ultra-tele lens ↩︎ - Length is given from the mount flange to the front of lens at its shortest. ↩︎
- Diameter excludes protrusions such as rabbit ears or stop-down levers. ↩︎
- S=straight; R=rounded; C=(almost)circular at all apertures. ↩︎
- Numbers equal aperture values on aperture ring; • intermediate click; – no intermediate click. ↩︎
- Sold already with the Miranda B. All-silver design. ↩︎
- Mentioned in the Manuals for the Miranda C and D. silver and black design. Some samples sold as “Miranda” others as “Kowa Prominar-Miranda”. ↩︎
- Mentioned in the Automex (I-II) manuals explicitly as a Soligor Miranda lens. ↩︎
- It is possible that the 50/1.8 for the Automex/Sensorex family would have been introduced in 1966 with the Sensorex or in 1968 after the same lens was available for the (lower-end) Sensomat. However the first documented mention of the 50/1.8 for Sensorex is in the manual of the 1970 Sensorex-C. ↩︎