UV Filters?

ddbowdoin

Well-Known Member
A lot of people will claim it will affect sharpness and while that may be true I could see it with really low grade cheap filters. B+W filters (brand) would likely not produce that issue
 

wiigirl

Well-Known Member
I say 'yay'.

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CP_alum08

Well-Known Member
I think if you have tons of money invested in good glass I would probably invest a few hundred more for "insurance". I wouldn't put a $100 filter on a $200 lens though, to me it seems like overkill. However, if you're a naturally clumsy person or will be in situations where your lens could get bumped or scratched then I might reconsider. Personally I don't use them.
 

WDI 1998

Active Member
An interesting thing I found with my UV filter. For night shots it works great as a starlight filter giving me great star burst effects on all lights. I forgot I had the UV filter on and this is what I got.


Disney 2012 (1 of 1)-4 by Doug McClentic, on Flickr

I added a starlight filter on top of that and got a mess of very strong star bursts for every light.
 

WDWFigment

Well-Known Member
^That's a result of your aperture, not the UV filter.

I don't use UV filters on any lenses. I use lens hoods for protection.
 

CP_alum08

Well-Known Member
An interesting thing I found with my UV filter. For night shots it works great as a starlight filter giving me great star burst effects on all lights. I forgot I had the UV filter on and this is what I got.


Disney 2012 (1 of 1)-4 by Doug McClentic, on Flickr

I added a starlight filter on top of that and got a mess of very strong star bursts for every light.
What WDWfigment said. Those bursts are a result of shooting at f/22, not the UV filter. I'm curious though, if you didn't know f/22 would produce those bursts why were shooting at f/22?
 

WDI 1998

Active Member
What WDWfigment said. Those bursts are a result of shooting at f/22, not the UV filter. I'm curious though, if you didn't know f/22 would produce those bursts why were shooting at f/22?

Happy accident I guess. I was playing with different exposures / shutter speeds / ISO to get more experience with manual mode.
 

thomas998

Well-Known Member
^That's a result of your aperture, not the UV filter.

I don't use UV filters on any lenses. I use lens hoods for protection.

Agreed, I firmly believe that it would take less force to break a UV filter than a camera lens... and if that UV filter gets broken I'm pretty sure it will be from a outside force pushing in and that means the broken glass of the UV filter will be scratching the lens I was trying to protect.... maybe if they start making UV lenses out of gorilla glass it might be worth considering, but not until then.
 

RonAnnArbor

Well-Known Member
Always UV filter -- protect the lens, and cut down on haze. Occasional use of starburst filter. I use them on every one of my pro lenses. With good filters, there should be no noticable difference between using them or no in your photos, daytime or nighttime. But I don't use those cheapy 12.00 Best Buy filters either. Hoya Pro grade, or B+W for me.
 

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