Photographic filters are akin to sunglasses. They shield your lens similarly to sunglasses protecting your eyes. They also modify light in much the same way as sunglasses do.
Here’s an overview of some of the types of photographic filters available.
UV Filters
UV filters are the Go To filters for most people. Other than a purpose-built protective filter, UV filters have the least impact on image quality. They can be left permanently mounted to your lens so that when the unexpected happens and your new-born projectile-vomits, you need only clean the filter.
They’re called UV filters because they eliminate the haze commonly seen on a summer’s day. Commonsense suggests that colour and sharpness remain untainted because a clear filter attuned to only ultra-violet lightwaves will ignore the slower wavelength colours.
But, as with many applications of commonsense, arguments abound. Detractors point out that anything between subject and lens glass will affect image quality. They also argue that your best defence to protect your lens is your plastic lens cap.
Whatever the argument, the upside is that your $3000 lens will be shielded from untoward debris and will never wear the visible evidence of subsequent scouring efforts. The downside is that a stickler will resort to a 400% image enlargement just so they can offer you a smug “told you so”.
If you who own top-shelf glass, such as Canon’s L lenses and the faster Nikon lenses, you will want nothing less than Hoya’s Pro1D filters to maintain high optical standards. This applies equally to the circular polarising filters described further on.
Circular Polarisers
Unlike UV filters, you’re hardly going to want to leave a circular polariser on your lens fulltime. They WILL have an affect on your images. But it’s an effect you will achieve by no other means.
Take, for example, a landscape shot featuring lots of blue sky and puffy white clouds. Without a filter, your exposure is correct for the trees and farm buildings but the blue sky looks washed out and the clouds have no definition.
Enter the circular polariser. These filters work like Polaroid sunglasses – they redirect, i.e. refract, the angle of light passing through. You will not only see more sky depth and detail, you’ll also be able to eliminate reflections off glass, water or foliage.
Polarisation is most effective at right angles to the sun. At 180 degrees – in other words with the sun directly behind you – polarisation is almost non-existent.
Due the directional nature of polarisers, it’s not a good idea to use them when you want to stitch together a panorama, as the sky in each panel will be at variance with the others.
Above left with a polariser; above right without a polariser.
Above left with a polariser; above right without a polariser.
Above: upper half with a polariser; lower half without a polariser.
Neutral Density Filters
Neutral Density (ND) filters reduce the amount of light through the lens. They’re designed to filter out all colours equally, therefore having no effect on the colours in your images, hence the term “neutral”.
All ND filters are grey in colour – the deeper the grey, the more light is reduced. These filters come in three strengths, giving 1, 2 and 3-stop reductions in light intensity. You can stack a number of ND filters to further reduce the intensity of light.
ND filters have ‘gradings” depending on the amount of light they cut. A higher grading means lower light.
There are two commonly used notations:
ND2 ND4 ND8:
The number designates the density of the filter based on binary numbers 2=21
i.e. 1 stop of light. 4=22 i.e. 2 stop of light, etc.
0.3 0.6 0.9 ND:
Another notation in which every 0.3 will make you lose one stop of light. So a 0.3ND will cut 1 stop of light 0.6 2 stops etc.
ND filters help in at least three situations:
- reduce light intensity;
- allow slower shutter speed use; and
- allow larger aperture use.
If the shutter speed remains the same after adding an ND filter, you’ll use a larger aperture to obtain the same exposure. Likewise, if the aperture is retained after adding an ND filter, a slower shutter speed will achieve the same exposure.
Keep in mind that a larger aperture produces a shallower Depth of Field. So, for example, if you are shooting a portrait in broad daylight and the light conditions demand high shutter speeds, an ND filter will allow you to use bigger apertures to isolate your subject via shallow DOF.
On occasions where you cannot achieve correct exposure even with the smallest aperture and fastest shutter speed, ND filters provide a means. Reduced light intensity allows either a slower shutter speed or a larger aperture. A slower shutter speed can give moving objects a blurred result (i.e., motion blur) to create a sense of motion.
Shooting a waterfall through an ND filter is a revelation. The key to achieving that milky water effect is slow shutter speed.
Above, without an ND filter.
Above, with an ND filter.
You do not want to use ND filters when different objects are lit differently and you need to expose all of them correctly.
Should you buy a Neutral Density filter? If you shoot landscapes, you DEFINITELY need to have an ND or two in your kit. ND filters provide an effect you cannot reproduce in Photoshop.
Filters available from CamerasDirect
Unlike UV filters, you’re hardly going to want to leave a circular polariser on your lens fulltime. They WILL have an affect on your images. But it’s an effect you will achieve by no other means.
Take, for example, a landscape shot featuring lots of blue sky and puffy white clouds. Without a filter, your exposure is correct for the trees and farm buildings but the blue sky looks washed out and the clouds have no definition.
Enter the circular polariser. These filters work like Polaroid sunglasses – they redirect, i.e. refract, the angle of light passing through. You will not only see more sky depth and detail, you’ll also be able to eliminate reflections off glass, water or foliage.
Polarisation is most effective at right angles to the sun. At 180 degrees – in other words with the sun directly behind you – polarisation is almost non-existent.
Due the directional nature of polarisers, it’s not a good idea to use them when you want to stitch together a panorama, as the sky in each panel will be at variance with the others.
<a rel=”attachment wp-att-2123″ href=”http://www.cameratalk.com.au/2009/07/09/2122/500px-circularpolarizer/”><img class=”alignnone size-medium wp-image-2123″ title=”CircularPolarizer” src=”http://www.cameratalk.com.au/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/500px-CircularPolarizer-300×114.jpg” alt=”CircularPolarizer” width=”300″ height=”114″ /></a>
<em>Above left with a polariser; above right without a polariser. </em>
<a rel=”attachment wp-att-2124″ href=”http://www.cameratalk.com.au/2009/07/09/2122/500px-polariser_on_vegetation/”><img class=”alignnone size-medium wp-image-2124″ title=”Polariser_on_Foliage” src=”http://www.cameratalk.com.au/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/500px-Polariser_on_Vegetation-300×100.jpg” alt=”Polariser_on_Foliage” width=”300″ height=”100″ /></a>
<em>Above left with a polariser; above right without a polariser. </em>
<a rel=”attachment wp-att-2125″ href=”http://www.cameratalk.com.au/2009/07/09/2122/500px-polarizer_through_glass/”><img class=”alignnone size-medium wp-image-2125″ title=”Polariser_Through_Glass” src=”http://www.cameratalk.com.au/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/500px-Polarizer_Through_Glass-300×201.jpg” alt=”Polariser_Through_Glass” width=”300″ height=”201″ /></a>
<em>Above: upper half with a polariser; lower half without a polariser. </em>
<h4><strong>Neutral Density Filters</strong></h4>
Neutral Density (ND) filters reduce the amount of light through the lens. They’re designed to filter out all colours equally, therefore having no effect on the colours in your images, hence the term “neutral”.
All ND filters are grey in colour – the deeper the grey, the more light is reduced. These filters come in three strengths, giving 1, 2 and 3-stop reductions in light intensity. You can stack a number of ND filters to further reduce the intensity of light.
ND filters have ‘gradings” depending on the amount of light they cut. A higher grading means lower light.
There are two commonly used notations:
<strong>ND2 ND4 ND8:</strong>
The number designates the density of the filter based on binary numbers 2=21
i.e. 1 stop of light. 4=22 i.e. 2 stop of light, etc.
<strong>0.3 0.6 0.9 ND:</strong>
Another notation in which every 0.3 will make you lose one stop of light. So a 0.3ND will cut 1 stop of light 0.6 2 stops etc.
<strong>ND filters help in at least three situations:</strong>
<ol>
<li>reduce light intensity;</li>
<li>allow slower shutter speed use; and</li>
<li>allow larger aperture use.</li>
</ol>
If the shutter speed remains the same after adding an ND filter, you’ll use a larger aperture to obtain the same exposure. Likewise, if the aperture is retained after adding an ND filter, a slower shutter speed will achieve the same exposure.
Keep in mind that a larger aperture produces a shallower Depth of Field. So, for example, if you are shooting a portrait in broad daylight and the light conditions demand high shutter speeds, an ND filter will allow you to use bigger apertures to isolate your subject via shallow DOF.
On occasions where you cannot achieve correct exposure even with the smallest aperture and fastest shutter speed, ND filters provide a means. Reduced light intensity allows either a slower shutter speed or a larger aperture. A slower shutter speed can give moving objects a blurred result (i.e., motion blur) to create a sense of motion.
<strong>Shooting a waterfall through an ND filter is a revelation</strong>. The key to achieving that milky water effect is slow shutter speed.
<a rel=”attachment wp-att-2126″ href=”http://www.cameratalk.com.au/2009/07/09/2122/ndwithouta/”><img class=”size-full wp-image-2126 alignnone” title=”NDWithouta” src=”http://www.cameratalk.com.au/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/NDWithouta.jpg” alt=”NDWithouta” width=”231″ height=”154″ /></a>
<em>Above, without an ND</em><em> filter.</em>
<em> <a rel=”attachment wp-att-2127″ href=”http://www.cameratalk.com.au/2009/07/09/2122/ndwitha/”><img class=”alignnone size-full wp-image-2127″ title=”NDWitha” src=”http://www.cameratalk.com.au/wordpress/wp-content/uploads/2009/07/NDWitha.jpg” alt=”NDWitha” width=”231″ height=”151″ /></a></em>
<em>Above, with an ND filter. </em>
<strong><em>You do not want to use ND filters</em></strong> when different objects are lit differently and you need to expose all of them correctly.
<strong>Should you buy a Neutral Density filter?</strong> If you shoot landscapes, you DEFINITELY need to have an ND or two in your kit. ND filters provide an effect you cannot reproduce in Photoshop.
Popularity: 1%
Related posts:
- Apertures… Open Wide And Say Aaah! Everybody is aware of what it means to have a 70-200mm lens, or a 18-105mm. These days, the emphasis always seems to turn to the zoom range when it comes to buying a lens. But how about that other set of numbers… the ones after the “F”? Those numbers refer...
- Getting Creative If you use a DSLR only for taking family snapshots and holiday pics you’re missing out on its enormous power. Early on, if I wanted to be creative with my film camera I had to juggle lens choice, lens aperture, shutter speed and even use filters to achieve that...
- Hoya’s New HD Lens Filters HOYA, the world renowned optical glass manufacturer, has once again pushed the boundaries of optical engineering and created an innovative high definition line of filters. Hoya has managed to produce a 4x increase in the hardness of the glass itself through a chemical enhancement process. The glass is now classed...
- Shooting in Program AE A while ago, I discovered that even with a digital SLR, the auto exposure setting can mess up some subjects. Properly understood, the Program AE setting, however, will help capture a correctly exposed and sharp photo. Most camera Program AE settings favour a fast shutter speed to reduce camera...
- All I want for Christmas… Men and technology… what is it that makes us so attracted to those shiny technical gadgets? For me, I get drawn into gadget shops just so that I don’t need to go into the girly fashion shops when I’m out shopping with the Mrs. When I’m online though, I just...






