If you end up with a dark foreground because of the 3 stops difference you can always pull it back in RAW processing. 0.9 is also very useful for the usual moving water effects.
I have a soft 0.9 but I was out with a professional landscape photographer the other week and he only uses hard edged ones now.
A soft grad on a 35mm camera or digi SLR is almost usless in most circumstances. The area of grading between the ND and clear parts is so large that it will almost cover the whole frame.
If you're shooting with a large format, or big medium format camera then it becomes usefull.
As for whether to go for 1, 2 or 3 stops of compensation, if you're only going to get one, then splitting the difference and going .6 may be the one that works most of the time. If you can stretch to 2 filters, then as said above, the .3 and.6 stack to make a .9. You also get to have more control that way as you can set them at different heights if you need to.
A soft grad on a 35mm camera or digi SLR is almost usless in most circumstances. The area of grading between the ND and clear parts is so large that it will almost cover the whole frame.
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