Many telephoto zoom lenses deliver their poorest performance when used wide open at maximum zoom. That might be what you're seeing here. If you test it with and without the filter, my prediction is that it will still be slightly soft in this region even without the filter.Do UV filters really cause any picture problems, ie soft focusing? flare? poorer pictures?
have 1 on my new sigma, but have slightly soft focus at 200mm f2.8 n f4.0
gona try lens tomorrow without filter to see if its better!
Don't want to hijack the thread, but how does the canon nifty fifty work with a UV filter?
Typical lens flare using the Canon nifty fifty and a UV filter ...
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I did return to get a decent image without the filter
HTH
Only thing i will mention is recently i got a skylight filter from jessops and when i put it on the lens i notice it slowed the exposure down from 1/40 to 1/30 admittedly thats nothing to worry about but the UV filter didnt affect the exposure at all, Just thought i`d mention it.
?What are the noticable benefits of using UV filters and in which circumstances :shrug:?
What are the noticable benefits of using UV filters and in which circumstances :shrug:?
There are none. Zero. Zilch. In terms of allegedly enhancing the image in some way, a UV filter does absolutely nothing with digital.
UV filters go back to film, and to relatively simple lenses that had only four slender glass elements. Film has some sensitivity to UV, and these lenses sometimes allowed UV light through, typically at high altitude where there is a lot of UV that has not been filtered out by the atmosphere. Or under a bright blue sky. Blue-ish snowscapes were a commonly bad example, and a UV filter prevented this.
A Skylight filter is a UV with a hint of pink, which takes the warming up thing a tiny bit further. Also, early electronic flash was a bit blue and portraits often benefit from a slightly warmer treatment, so a Skylight filter could also be used then, too.
But today, modern multi-element lenses do not allow much UV through. Optical glass often has a tendency to be very slightly yellow anyway, which is noticeable when you get to see a big chunk of it. And if that wasn't enough, digital sensors have their own UV filters, and also infra red filters, to contain their sensitivity to the visible spectrum only.
In theory, any filter will degrade sharpness. It must do. But in practise this is very rarely noticeable provided the glass is perfectly flat. Some cheap acrylic filters might suffer slightly from this; Cokin have occasionally been accused.
But the major problem with filters is flare. Uncoated filters are very prone to this, but only the very cheapest are uncoated these days. I can't remember when I last saw one. Even a single coating (usually blue) makes a huge improvement, and multi-coating (usually greenish) takes this a useful step further. It takes quite a lot to provoke serious flare with a multi-coated filter, but it can happen.
Try photographing car headlights straight on, in darkness, and you will see even a multi-coated filter makes quite a mess. The problem is made far worse by the mirror-like surface of the digital sensor which reflects light back out of the lens, which the rear surface of the filter then reflects back down to form flare spots and ghosting (as the post above shows). It is this phenominon that is addressed in 'digitally enhanced' or 'digitally optimised' lenses. These are usually originally designed for film, but for digital they have extra coating on the rear element to prevent reflections off the sensor bouncing off and creating flare.
. Luckily, neither of them were very important shots (oh yes, I like to shoot rubbish
.
What about circular polorisers? Do they suffer/cause problems in the same way?
I actually really like #3
joe
Don't want to hijack the thread, but how does the canon nifty fifty work with a UV filter?
Any flat piece of glass placed in front of the lens will cause these effects - UV, plain, polarising, whatever. There are two flare effects going on here. The first is that any glass-to-air surface reflects a small percentage of the light falling on it. It is, in effect, a very poor mirror in this respect. Since there are no perfectly flat surfaces in a lens, these reflections fly off at all sorts of angles and while most of it is absorbed by the blackening of the lens barrel and the light baffling inside, some of it eventually gets through in scrambled form creating a slight fog over the image. This is sometimes called veiling glare.
The second effect is the mirroring of image elements, which is seen in the extraordinary examples posted here. When you fit a filter, basically what you have is two mirrors facing eachother - the surface of the sensor and the rear surface of the filter - and light just bounces back and forth between them.
But multi-coating is very effective, and if you use a high quality filter you are unlikely to see anything like this in everyday use. But if you are shooting bright lights, even with a very good filter you will get at least some image degradation. Usually it will be so slight that you don't even notice it, but sometimes you certainly will. And given that UV filters have no optical upside whatsoever, it makes sense not to fit one unless you really need the physical protection (eg sea spray, baby's fingers, dog's noses).
Polarising filters are another question, but I use a CP a lot![]()
. Just hope that they live up to thier reputation :|.I bought nifty because it's cheap and I don't need to bother with fitting it with UV protector![]()