I need a protective filter, is there anything better than skylight for everyday use?
I use these B+W UV filters (I never take them off). They're excellent and they give you better image-quality than if you had no filter. Not cheap, but they're worth it... Be very careful of cheap filters. They usually degrade your pictures...
B+W 67mm UV Haze MRC 010M Filter 66-070236 B&H Photo Video
The best protection for my lenses that I have found ,is a lens hood. Unless I'm shooting something that requires a filter, ie...an ND filter to slow things down or a CPL to cut reflections and such, I really don't want anything between the scene that I'm shooting and my lens.
Would this one be any better with the nano coating? It's only a few dollars more. B+W 58mm XS-Pro UV Haze MRC-Nano 010M Filter 66-1066120 B&H
I don't know. I would talk to B&H tech support and ask them about it. They were the ones that recommended the B+W filter that I mentioned above, in the first place, to me. I had bought a much cheaper (different brand) UV filter that clearly degraded my image-quality; so I returned it and got the B+W's.
My guess is that the nano will be great, but they have some real filter experts there at B&H and they're super helpful...
I could do that but a company will always recommend the product that they have the highest markup on, thus a Hoya, or Tiffen might be better but would not make them as much money. Will try them anyway. Thanks.
You really don't know B&H, do you?I could do that but a company will always recommend the product that they have the highest markup on, thus a Hoya, or Tiffen might be better but would not make them as much money. Will try them anyway. Thanks.
You really don't know B&H, do you?
Well you're just full of information, aren't you?However every company sells to make a profit.
This is the sort of thing I like to point out to the "you don't need a protective filter" crowd: a lot more can happen to a front lens element than impact damage.Dont believe a filter does a lot to protect against bumps and bangs that a good hood cant do,i spend a lot of time on the beach,very muddy areas and close to tame waterfowl constantly splashing mucky lake water about,the filter does offer protection against splashes in these situations,i have two marks from these splashes already which will not clean off completely.
This is the sort of thing I like to point out to the "you don't need a protective filter" crowd: a lot more can happen to a front lens element than impact damage.
Don't believe me? Come on out here and shoot with me for a week...
First we'll hit the beach and deal with salt spray and the crunchy residue it leaves behind. Later we'll head out to the low desert where you can experience the talcum-powder consistency of desert sand that sticks to everything under the sun. Then we'll head to the campus where I work so you can get some "mud" (wet clay) splatter on your gear while we photograph ceramicists at work.
You can then lecture me about how I don't need a protective filter as you sit and clean all that c--p off your lens. I'll be hanging on your every word as I unscrew my $60 filter and run it under the faucet.
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