hortense
Member
Estimates how many stops of increased exposure are required using a circular polarizer? I have no in-camera exposure meter.
Thanks Dave . The rim IS marked in 1-stop increment (plus/minus up to 2-stops). Didnt look at it! Thanks for your help!Satinsnow said:Depending on the brand, I have seen anywhere from 1.75 to 3 stops, there should be a filter factor printed on the rim of the filter, what brand is it?
Dave
Flash - Sounds like you've done this. I'll give it a try.flash19901 said:... Try using a hand held meter and meter the filter that way. Might get you closer than guessing.
Ole said:There is no difference in the filter facton between circular and linear polarisers.
Checking the meter reading while rotating shows how much polarised light is being absorbed by the filter, so IMO it makes more sense to use a fixed factor. After all, you want the brigh reflections to be darker, don't you?
A second way to use polarisers is just the opposite: to enhance reflections. When rotated so that the reflections are strongest that light goes straight through, the rest of the scene is still 2 1/3 stops darker.
Ole said:Søren, you're totally right. See my answer above.
Soeren said:Stupid question alert.
. . . if using a handheld meter for incident metering it should result in the correct exposure of the ground.
Am I totally wrong ?
Cheers, Søren
titrisol said:PS Question... does any compnay still make warm polarizers?
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