Circular Polarising Filters

Eyon

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Ian
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I have found myself shooting pictures of something called a Seabreacher recently. It's kind of a jet ski come submarine come ultimate toy type thing for the water. Ive never photographed water based subjects and was wondering the benefits of a polarising filter to add to the end of my lens.

Given the below shots, what would I be set to gain from the filter? Would it improve my photographs with less water reflections, or is it pointless with so much movement?

95mm polariser for my Sigma 150-600 is £££ and wouldn't want to waste the money on one if the benefits were minimal or none.





Advice appreciated.
 
what would I be set to gain from the filter? Would it improve my photographs with less water reflections, or is it pointless with so much movement?


A CPL does wonders as long as you understand it powerful but nar-
row filed of effect. Light must be coming at a +/- 90° angle to the lens
considering the reflective surface as the base of the angle.

Since the CP is dealing with light, the movement itself is insignificant
but in one aspect: if it takes the reflective surface too far over or under
the said 90°. At that point, it acts like a neutral density filter.
 
For darkening blue skies, the polarising angle is 90 degrees, but for reflections it's 30-40 degrees to the surface (Brewsters Angle). Reflections on the water will be around that, making it darker, but I'm not sure what benefit that would be and you'd lose 1.5-2 stops of light.
 
Thanks for the help chaps, I think you've saved me £200! Due to the nature of the subject, I can't guarantee the direction which I'll be facing from the Sun so it seems pointless to buy the filter.

Cheers,
Ian
 
What an amazing thing. Looks like the mini sub from the Tin Tin books.
 
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