Description
- Polarizers provide color and contrast enhancement. Reflected light usually shows up as white glare, which washes out the colors in the image. A polarizer corrects this problem, producing a deep, azure sky. It also eliminates glare from non-metallic surfaces, such as windows and water. In general, color saturation can be dramatically improved, especially outdoors. Think of it as a sunglass for your camera
- Circular polarizers have the same effect as polarizers for cameras with the split-beam metering system common on autofocus SLRs
- Use a circular polarizer to most effectively polarize the area of the sky: Point your index finger toward the sun. Extend your thumb at a right angle (90°) and rotate it around the axis of your index finger. It will point out the darkest blue band from horizon to horizon
- The polarizer provides color and contrast enhancement. Reflected light usually shows up as white glare, which washes out the color in the image. The polarizer corrects this problem, producing a deep azure sky
- Glare can also be eliminated from non-metallic surfaces, such as windows and water. In general, color saturation can be dramatically improved, especially outdoors. Think of it as your camera’s sunglasses
- Polarizing filters have an 18-layer multi-resistance coating (MRC) that helps protect against water, dust, and grease, while also preventing ghosting
- These filters are equipped with black-rimmed glass to reduce the chance of light reflecting off the edges
- The ultra-thin filter frame helps avoid vignetting on ultra-wide angle lenses and is also designed to hold lens caps in place
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