w7xman
Active member
This post hopefully will highlight the effects and take away a bit of the mystery surrounding split filters.
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BorealChickadee asked the other day:
I know there are graduated(and reverse graduated) "gray" filters that can be used to correct the overexposed sky issue. Is there anything that could be handheld over the lens of a point and shoot. This question isn't as farfetched as it sounds. I've had good luck handholding a polarizing filter over my p&s.
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Graduated Neutral Density filters (GND's) are the most useful landscape photographers tool next to a polarizer. They are a piece of glass that is smoked on the top, and clear on the bottom, allowing you to selectively darken a scene. Here's different variations I found in picture form on pbase:
http://www.pbase.com/otfchallenge/image/19228021
THese filters can easily be held in front of the lens or put in adaptors. They come in different stops (darknesses) allowing you to experiment given the contrast in a scene.
I took this series below right before the holidays, and it shows really well how they help balance the exposure of a scene. Note how the first picture has an overexposed sky, and underexposed rocks.
Also note that I think that the effect is a bit overdone in this series (as I held back the sky perhaps a bit much), but demonstrates what the filters do well...
No Filter:
Two stop GND:
I'm pretty sure others on the board use them, hopefully they can build upon this basic knowledge...
***********************************
BorealChickadee asked the other day:
I know there are graduated(and reverse graduated) "gray" filters that can be used to correct the overexposed sky issue. Is there anything that could be handheld over the lens of a point and shoot. This question isn't as farfetched as it sounds. I've had good luck handholding a polarizing filter over my p&s.
***********************************
Graduated Neutral Density filters (GND's) are the most useful landscape photographers tool next to a polarizer. They are a piece of glass that is smoked on the top, and clear on the bottom, allowing you to selectively darken a scene. Here's different variations I found in picture form on pbase:
http://www.pbase.com/otfchallenge/image/19228021
THese filters can easily be held in front of the lens or put in adaptors. They come in different stops (darknesses) allowing you to experiment given the contrast in a scene.
I took this series below right before the holidays, and it shows really well how they help balance the exposure of a scene. Note how the first picture has an overexposed sky, and underexposed rocks.
Also note that I think that the effect is a bit overdone in this series (as I held back the sky perhaps a bit much), but demonstrates what the filters do well...
No Filter:
Two stop GND:
I'm pretty sure others on the board use them, hopefully they can build upon this basic knowledge...
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