Rectangular filters and flare

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flatulent1

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Once upon a time I had a set of Cokins. Didn't use them enough to justify the cost, got tired of carrying them around, eventually passed them off on some poor unsuspecting idio -er I mean acquaintance.

I used them long enough to wonder about something... Light shining directly on a glass (or resin) surface tends to cause flare, this is why we use lens hoods. Rectangular filters that slip in and out of filter holders are not sealed to the lens in the way screw-on filters are, and are open to light bouncing off the back as well as the front, not to mention light getting in around the exposed edges of the filter (think fiber optics). Is this a real concern, or have I been snorting too much developer?
 

coigach

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If you use them carefully I don't reckon there's much to worry about.

I shoot landscapes with b+w transparencies and use Lee rectangular yellow + ND grads most of the time. Provided that you shield the filters from directional sun (I use a cheap lightweight foam sit-mat bought from a campling shop), everything should be hunky-dory...:smile:

Cheers,
Gavin
 
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holmburgers

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Or mount them on the other element of your lens, if that's an option; i.e. large format.
 

AgX

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Screw-on-filters are mostly made from one piece of coloured glass, so there are not those four additional transitions between substances of different recfractivity.

Sheet filters laminated between glass panes are a rarity.
 

Q.G.

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Resin filters are one piece affairs too.

The dangers of using an open holder as mentioned are possible light piping due to the exposed edge (could happen, would cause problems if the filter is scratched or dirty), and light extraneous hitting the rear surface.

The solution, of course, is to use them in a holder that doesn't expose them to any light but the image forming light.

Another danger of Cokin filters, being Cokin filters, is image quality degradation.
 
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flatulent1

flatulent1

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Resin filters are one piece affairs too.

The dangers of using an open holder as mentioned are possible light piping due to the exposed edge (could happen, would cause problems if the filter is scratched or dirty), and light extraneous hitting the rear surface.

My main reason for not hurrying to replace my departed Cokins.

The solution, of course, is to use them in a holder that doesn't expose them to any light but the image forming light.

Is there such a holder?
 

lxdude

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The dangers of using an open holder as mentioned are possible light piping due to the exposed edge (could happen, would cause problems if the filter is scratched or dirty), and light extraneous hitting the rear surface.

I blackened the edges of mine with permanent marker. I don't use them much and never tried to do any empirical tests, but I figured it wouldn't hurt.
 

Q.G.

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Is there such a holder?

I believe so.
Myself, i use resin filters in a Hasselblad ProShade 6093, in which they are fully enclosed (downside: you can't use grads, unless small/square ones in a fixed position).
I wouldn't be surprised if Cromatek or Lee also have such a holder.
In days of old, Kodak sold a holder that was closed on three sides, and had a hinged lid on top.
 
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