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INFO: Trad Archery for Bowhunters



lens filter help

Started by stickbowhntr, April 24, 2010, 11:40:00 AM

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stickbowhntr

Where is there some good info for them? I need to get a few and have NO Idea what I want. I shoot mostly scenery, animals and "HERO" stuff some inside family stuff [birthdays etc]I am Shooting 2 different Canon XTi"s

Killdeer

For general purposes, I use a "daylight" or UV filter on my lenses, mostly to protect the glass. Hoya filters have served me well.

I also have a polarizer for outdoor photography, and a graduated neutral density filter that I seldom play with. The modern digital cameras have a lot of built-in effects that used to be the duty of filters, such as light correction for incandescent and fluorescent bulbs, sepia tones and the like. This is likely a bummer for filter-makers.

I imagine you can get some pretty good info on the web, I did my learning before I was computer-literate. I read a lot of "Outdoor Photography" magazine, filter ads and B&H catalogs to get some info. Scout around using Google and you will get more info than you can absorb, I bet!

Killdeer
Long, long afterward, in an oak I found the arrow, still unbroke;
And the song, from beginning to end, I found again in the heart of a friend.

~Longfellow

TGMM Family Of The Bow

stickbowhntr

mostly to protect the glass. Hoya filters have served me well.


My ideas too>>>>-------->>>>>>>>>>>>>>

dakota tim

Do you want a filter to just protect the front element of your lens?  If so, at least make sure it's multi-coated.  It always amazes me that people will spend 1k-2k on "L" glass & buy a $20 filter!

If you want a filter to do more than protect your glass there are better options than screw on:

  Lee Filters

Like Killy said look on the net
What was big was not the antlers, but the chance. What was full was not the meatpole but the memory of the hunt.    --Aldo Leopold

stickbowhntr

till I know ANY better just for lens protection ...then in a month or so something to add to the lens..

stickbowhntr

ok went to that site ...it will be a big help , thanks

Ralphie

If you buy a filter for lens protection, at least buy the filter made by the lens maker. Don't put a cheap filter in front of a good lens. Quality will suffer.
I think just the lens cap is enough to protect your lens.
Blow off loose dirt and remove smudges with lens tissue.
Just keep the lens clean. Forget filters.
Tradition is not the worship of ashes, but the preservation of fire.

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