If you see the light at a later date and realize that B&W film is really made for printing in a darkroom on an enlarger (yeah, I scanned stuff before going to a full analog workflow because the quality is much better from an enlarger on fiber paper), you're gonna be screwed because all you will have is negs that could and perhaps should have been made w/ a filter on the lens, but weren't.
I use a hood all the time along w/ a yellow or red filter to darken skies and bring the clouds out into good definition, so no need for a filter for protection. A hood is all you need anyway for that. As for quality filters, I have never seen any difference between inexpensive coated filters and expensive ones. In fact, most of the Tiffens I have used were uncoated filters. Never made a speck of difference in IQ compared to the expensive ones. I go by what I see, not what test results may or may not show. Photography is a visual thing. Never believe anything just because it's printed somewhere or comes from an "authority". Look at it yourself and make your own decisions.
This is not directed at the op at all, but I find all these scanning and photoshop/lightroom discussions to be off topic and annoying. They belong over at DPUG because they're about a digital workflow, no matter that it originated w/ film. Just one person's opinion :]
I use a hood all the time along w/ a yellow or red filter to darken skies and bring the clouds out into good definition, so no need for a filter for protection. A hood is all you need anyway for that. As for quality filters, I have never seen any difference between inexpensive coated filters and expensive ones. In fact, most of the Tiffens I have used were uncoated filters. Never made a speck of difference in IQ compared to the expensive ones. I go by what I see, not what test results may or may not show. Photography is a visual thing. Never believe anything just because it's printed somewhere or comes from an "authority". Look at it yourself and make your own decisions.
This is not directed at the op at all, but I find all these scanning and photoshop/lightroom discussions to be off topic and annoying. They belong over at DPUG because they're about a digital workflow, no matter that it originated w/ film. Just one person's opinion :]
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