300d - Help with what accessories to buy!

jacko198

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Jack
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Hey guys.

Im totaly new to all this, so i am wondering, what are the advantages of hoods and filters for lenses? And what is worth getting and what isnt?

Also, with remote shuter releases - what is good and what is not! :shrug:
 
It all depends on what your going to be taking photos of.
 
Landscapes, long exposures, maybe motor sport. No portraits or macro (at the moment)
 
Get to know the camera first. Then think about the accessories as you goalong and you will then realise what you NEED, not what you would like....2 different things!

I would say the first and most important accessory to buy is a good tripod - you can use it with ANY camera in tthe future, so buy ONE good one - otherwise you will waste money on a poor one that you will then replace and then you will replace that one etc. Get a good one from the outset and keep it.

The next most important accessory would be a couple of GOOD ND filters. I would suggest a 0.6ND and a 0.3ND - hard grads, not soft grads. This way you have 3 filters:
0.3
0.6 and by adding them together....
0.9

Cable release type thing...use the self timer. There are always ways round things.
 
Ah ok, what makes of filters would you recomend?

The only reason why i wanted a cable release type thing is that it goes upto 30sec exposure, then bulb, which on my 300d, you have to hold (which can be annoying if its going over a min)
 
Jacko,

I didn't realise your camera only gave you 30 secs. Are you sure that there isn't a "T" position - for Time (as in Time exposure). You press the shutter button, it lifts the mirror and then opens the shutter - you then push the button again to close the shutter. It doesn't use as much power as other methods. I don't know all the modern cameras, but it was a common setting.

A cable release thingy isn't much more than about £20 anyway, so won't break the bank.

Filters. Yes, I would recommend Lee first off - sure, they are £30 a pop. But you get what you pay for and Lee make filters which do not induce casts - if you get one that does, they will replace it (before people start phoning in with "my Lee filter does this or that" - send it back, it shouldn't).

If you look at their website, they will try and sell you a Lee filter holder too...only of use if you use more than one filter at a time. I have the Pro set, I haven't actually used it for a long time. I use a couple of pieces of blu tac on the filter which holds it against the end of my lens (actually the UV filter ring - but you know what I mean) instead of bulking up with fancy filter holders.

Next recommend would be either Tiffen or Hi-Tec. Singh Ray are good too.

I would stay well clear of Cokin, regardless of how many people are happy wiht them. The likes of Joe Cornish use Lee for a reason....they are the best.

Buy them, if you need to be careful with your purchases, then buy the 0.6 first - it will do most situations (2 stops) to balance the contrast. had grad - set it to the horizon.

Polariser - again a good one. I used to use B&W, and thye are very good, but the Hoya Pro 1 polarisers are better on wide angles. They are lighter and thinner too, but not as robust. Just be very careful with them. My Hoya Pro 1 polarisers were about £130 each (I have 3, to save swapping when changing lenses). You will probably make do with just the one. DO NOT SKIMPON A POLARISER EITHER. A poor one is WORSE than none.
 
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