Bob Carnie
Subscriber
I would add that the hard filter will indeed improve your highlights by darkening an element in that region that is dark therefore creating more local contrast in the highlights.
For example telephone lines in a street scene will darken and create the illusion of detail by just being more obvious.
There are many situations that this additional burn of the highlights with the 5 filter will create a better print.
For example telephone lines in a street scene will darken and create the illusion of detail by just being more obvious.
There are many situations that this additional burn of the highlights with the 5 filter will create a better print.
As it was once explained to me, the soft filter affects the highlights to a large degree, and the shadows to a small degree. The hard filter affects the highlights very little if at all, and the the shadows to a great degree. In my mind a bungee cord is the best metaphor: you can "pin down" the highlights where you want them, then "stretch out" the shadows to get the contrast that you need without moving the highlights back up the scale.