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Photographic Accessories Discussion on other Photography related Equipment. Tripods, Luggage and suchlike. |
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#1
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Extreme ND filters
The now seem to be a range of extreme ND filters available (for those times you want exposures in seconds or even minutes to average out images)
The ones I know about are: B&W110 (about 7 stops) Hoya ND400 (about 8.5 stops) Lee big stopper (10 stops) All costing over £50 - far too much for the number of times I'm likely to use them! An alternative I'm planing to try is to use welding glass, which is generally available in 'shade 8' (10 stops) to 'shade 13' (15.7 stops). For around £2 as a 4¼" x 3¼" plate (which just about fits in a Cokin P holder. My initial filter is a shade 10 which works out at ~13 stops (ND7,500) - possibly a bit much for the lower light levels in the winter, so I've just ordered a shade 8 as well. I've seen photos done this way that look OK, though they do introduce a green cast (solved with custom WB or PP). Other potential problems are stray light (especially with the Cokin mount) & possibly flaws in the glass. I've recently checked the spectral curves of my standard ND filters. None of these block near IR at all (& absorbance is NOT uniform through the visible spectrum - in particular a peak absorbance ~450nm is roughly twice that either side). If the photo grade high ND filters are similar this would cause problems with my camera which is fairly sensitive to IR, welding glass should block IR (& UV). Has anyone any experience with this sort of photography? Or suggestions in reducing stray light? (Insulating tape will do for starters, but doesn't suit a long term solution.)
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Mike Pentax K5ii & Panasonic G5 user (with far too many bits to list) Member of North Essex Photographic Workshop Also online with PentaxUser.co.uk, Flickr, MU-43, MFLenses... |
#2
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I bought a few el cheapo Hong Kong NDs recently from Ebay, to have a try at long exposure daylight shots. It was a "kit" of three @ 72mm; ND2, ND4 and ND8, but they don't appear to be as "stoppy" as I'd have expected. Even the ND8 only adds a couple of stops-worth of exposure time. Also, the threads are "varied" (polite version ) in terms of quality of machining. I thought I'd try these first (only £15 inc p&p!) before going for any of the big name versions. At over £100, I'd be hard pushed to justify one of the Lee Big Stoppers. That's just crazy money.
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#3
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I've got a similar set of cheapo ND filters (in Cokin P mount) quality seems reasonable for those, but they don't have any need for a screw thread.
ND8 should be 3 stops BTW, 1/8 as much light, my set work out roughly right according to the spectrometer at work. ND=2^(stops)
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Mike Pentax K5ii & Panasonic G5 user (with far too many bits to list) Member of North Essex Photographic Workshop Also online with PentaxUser.co.uk, Flickr, MU-43, MFLenses... |
#4
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You might want to try Formatt filters. Not widely advertised in UK although they are made here they sell in the US as Hitech. Most reviews put them as better than Cokin but not quite as good as Lee. They do both professional (100mm) and P Mount (85mm). In a P Mount their ND @ density 3 (approx 9 stops) is £21.28+VAT and postage so probably around £30 all in.
http://www.formatt.co.uk/stills-filt...d-filters.aspx
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Nigel |
#5
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Thanks Nigel, but those filters appear to be unsuitable for CMOS sensors, so ( I assume) wouldn't work with mine. Not to worry though, your link took me (indirectly) to this :
http://www.premier-ink.co.uk/photogr...er-p-2827.html ...which is very interesting. I must start saving now! |
Tags |
diy, long exposures, nd filters |
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