You mean a 'petal' type hood, vs round.
The ideal lens hood is rectangular, same shape as the image, and shading the lens as much as possible without actually protruding into the picture. If you look through a petal hood from the lens side, it appears rectangular, but unlike an actually rectangular hood, it can be reversed for storage around the barrel, and they're also more robust, and cheaper to make.
Most lens hoods are more for physical protection than any really useful shading, though they're excellent for that and of course they do help with side lighting, reducing flare. But on a zoom for example, the hood is only the optimum size at the shortest focal length, and with lenses designed for full-frame cameras, the hood is also optimised for full-frame too so it's not as tight to the frame as it could be when used on a crop-format camera.

Here you are Alan, bought a hood from them for a Canon lens and it was fine, didn't have the felt lining, but can't have everything http://www.premier-ink.co.uk/photographic/lens-hoods/bayonet-lens-hoods/canon-ew78e-compatible-lens-hood-p-2766.htmlcan anyone recommend any after market hoods. I want a 72mm for my Canon 15-85 and the Canon hoods appear to be way overpriced?
Here you are Alan, bought a hood from them for a Canon lens and it was fine, didn't have the felt lining, but can't have everything http://www.premier-ink.co.uk/photographic/lens-hoods/bayonet-lens-hoods/canon-ew78e-compatible-lens-hood-p-2766.html
Another hi-jack if i can..........some fantastic and very helpfull answers but.......how do i find a hood that locks/fits to the outside edge of the lens as appossed to the filter screw (internal) ?
Thanks Richie
Same place I just linked to, look up Bayonet fitting ones here Richie http://www.premier-ink.co.uk/photographic/lens-hoods/bayonet-lens-hoods/-c-60_397_403.html
Hoods are specific to the lens - check the lens manufacturer's part reference. If you go cheaper third-party they're often not very well blackened inside and can even make things worse in strong side lighting where the semi-shiny surface of the hood collects the light and reflects a lot of it straight into the lens.
Genuine Canon hoods for example are lined with black flocking that is very effective. You can get as good as this by lining the hood with black self-adhesive felt. Easy job - 79p from Hobbycraft. Here http://direct.hobbycraft.co.uk/products-HobbyCraft-Black-Stick-On-Felt-Sheets_272679.htm
Example here of my DIY ideal 'zooming' lens hood, and illustrations of the improvement it makes - bottom of this page and continued on the next http://www.talkphotography.co.uk/forums/showthread.php?t=424241
Here it ismore pics on the link
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Very interesting read and surprised with the results...
Might be worth a play to make one
Can I ask why the rectangle slot in the foam, rather than a circle ?
Very interesting read and surprised with the results...
Might be worth a play to make one
Can I ask why the rectangle slot in the foam, rather than a circle ?
See post #2It's thin black card, not foam.
If you fancy making something, make sure to check it carefully at all focusing distances and apertures, as well as focal lengths - shoot a plain wall. When you think it's clear, you may find it can still cause some very minor shading around the edges of the frame. You can't see this clearly enough through the viewfinder, need to shoot real pictures.
, See post #2It's thin black card, not foam.
If you fancy making something, make sure to check it carefully at all focusing distances and apertures, as well as focal lengths - shoot a plain wall. When you think it's clear, you may find it can still cause some very minor shading around the edges of the frame. You can't see this clearly enough through the viewfinder, need to shoot real pictures.
Not wishing to hijack Matt's thread, but can anyone recommend any after market hoods. I want a 72mm for my Canon 15-85 and the Canon hoods appear to be way overpriced?
I bought a compatible hood from 7dayshop for my 28-135mm - apart from the subtle markings, you would never suspect it wasn't the 'real thing'. Here's the link for the 18-55 version. They've gone up in price considerably since I got mine last July, but they still look like a better buy than the Canon one.
Hoods are specific to the lens - check the lens manufacturer's part reference. If you go cheaper third-party they're often not very well blackened inside and can even make things worse in strong side lighting where the semi-shiny surface of the hood collects the light and reflects a lot of it straight into the lens.
Genuine Canon hoods for example are lined with black flocking that is very effective. You can get as good as this by lining the hood with black self-adhesive felt. Easy job - 79p from Hobbycraft. Here http://direct.hobbycraft.co.uk/products-HobbyCraft-Black-Stick-On-Felt-Sheets_272679.htm