I would also recommend getting a polarizing filter which will control and reduce reflections off water, glare off damp vegetation and improve the look of skies. It can also reduce the harshness of light from flash when used inside.
Tegan
This is a discussion on Noobie here! within the Digital photography forums, part of the Photography & Fine art photography category; I would also recommend getting a polarizing filter which will control and reduce reflections off water, glare off damp vegetation ...
I would also recommend getting a polarizing filter which will control and reduce reflections off water, glare off damp vegetation and improve the look of skies. It can also reduce the harshness of light from flash when used inside.
Tegan
"Photographic art requires the technical aspects of photography and the design aspects of art, both at an outstanding level."
Ah excellent, thanks Tegan, that brings up another question i had, where do you purchase your camera goodies. I'm based in Toronto, and being a new hobbie, i only discovered Henry's and of course Blacks. Any tips as to where i could get filters and other accessories from?
Also, thanks for the warm welcome guys![]()
"A Journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step" - Confucius
Downtown Camera near Henry's downtown store has lower prices, so does Aden Camera on some items. If you are not near either store, go to Henry's and quote the web site prices from the others and ask them to match the price. I have never payed Henry's price on camera equipment...always lower.
Tegan
"Photographic art requires the technical aspects of photography and the design aspects of art, both at an outstanding level."
If landscape is gonna be your thing... you may want to consider something like the Cokin P-series(or equiv) square filters. If you do this now the same filter set will work on all your future lenses saving you money in the end.
It may seem complicated now... but in no time you will be looking for the use of ND filters, Graduated ND filters to defeat your camera limitations for landscapes. You can also buy a circular polarizer that fits in you P series holder.
A simple adaptor rings allows you to install the filter set on all of you upcoming lenses in lieu of having to buy a polarizer for each differently sized lens.
good luck!
As for a good start to landscapes..... try using aperture priority around F9 with a tripod. Wait for the goood light...... only a few minutes at sunrise and sunset will the colours be noteworthy..... a remote shutter release will help...
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Nikon D300, Nikkor 24-70 2.8 . Nikkor 70-200 2.8 . Nikkor 50mm 1.8 . Sigma 105mm 2.8 . Tokina 12-24 4 . SB-600 . 2xVivitar 285
Ok great, thanks Travis!
Do i buy a square filter, along with an adapter ring to be able to fit them on different lenses?
So they attach something like this:
Lens -- adapter ring -- square filter -- x type filter
Am i completely off here?
"A Journey of a thousand miles begins with a single step" - Confucius
yup... that's pretty much it... except the polarizer is circular...
the adapter rings are about $15.00
The square filters are good for two reasons..... They reduce the likelyhood of vignetting as opposed to a screw type filter.... and for the ND grads.. you can slide the filter up and down to generally match the landscape... very helpful....
if you are into computers a better and cheaper way is to take two shots of the landscape... one properly exposing the sky... and one properly exposing the foreground... layer them in your graphic program and mask out the overexposed sky...
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Nikon D300, Nikkor 24-70 2.8 . Nikkor 70-200 2.8 . Nikkor 50mm 1.8 . Sigma 105mm 2.8 . Tokina 12-24 4 . SB-600 . 2xVivitar 285
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