The Lee Filters guy said you may as well use hard all the time - that the break isn't *that* abrupt.
Or at least that was my understanding.
The Lee Filters guy said you may as well use hard all the time - that the break isn't *that* abrupt.
Or at least that was my understanding.
Devitt would you say the hard or softer edge choice also dependant on the dof needed More than the type of shot its used for?
I'm going with the theory myself at the mo...I'm not sure what VulKan is getting at as the depth of field is the same with either, its just the field of view that changes, so I'd like some explanation of that.
But apart from that, the harder transition types must be effected by smaller apertures purely because the nearer to parallel rays of light will increase the chance that it becomes viewable ...to what extent, hardly noticeable, or really obvious I have no idea.
I'd love to see some examples....
At the Lee filter talk recently during the TP convention, Lee filters suggested their starter kit of 3 varied standard ND grads (.3,6, and .9 I think, all hard) (look on their website maybe) was a good place to start giving a useful mix of densities for almost any type of shot ...very good advice I though, I'll probably go for that myself even after knowing some answers from this thread.
The softer edge filters are considerably more I believe, and possibly not as immediately useful over the hard as one would imagine I'm thinking.. to begin with anyway.
I had to leave early - was there some sort of discount available to tp members on the Lee kit?
My two pennies worth....I have the Lee hard grad and sunset grad filters. During a longish exposure and with a 0.9 ND in the filter holder I hand hold the hard grad and move it slowly up and down in front of the lens. The only drawback is that you have to be wary of any unwanted reflections. I find that it works for me and it eliminates the "dark line2 across the frame.
Nice tip Trappe, good idea.
Theirs an invention awaiting to be patented...![]()

...there not pegs, there optical filtration clamps!!
...there not pegs, there optical filtration clamps!!
Hey we jest, but I actually had two thoughts as to whether I should post those patent words.![]()
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...although I'm guessing by your final statement you've not had to use, or don't use because of diffraction, f22 or similar as a necessity for a particular shot I find I do need the greater dof occasionally.
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No of course ive used it,thats what its there for,as long as you accept the trade off.
I mainly use it to slow shutter speeds in bright light. For Landscapes I rarely close past f11,f16 occasionally, that gives plenty of DOF front to back.
very informative vulkan thanks
Some people use optical filtration adhesive.......or blu-tac, as us normal folks call it.![]()
..No of course ive used it,thats what its there for,as long as you accept the trade off.
I mainly use it to slow shutter speeds in bright light. For Landscapes I rarely close past f11,f16 occasionally, that gives plenty of DOF front to back.
