Same old battle that has been happening since after WWII.
Japanese vs German.
Hoya vs B+W
Well, there is also Heliopan, equally good.
You know, I know that this has been said over and over again. So often that people pay it no attention. But it is true.
The minor differences visible in most quality lenses, or filters for that matter, have nowhere near the effect on your image as your technique does. If you are shooting handheld then the cause for any differences you find are so variable that it is impossible to know what caused it.
If you wish to spend money on B+W filters go for it. They are lovely and are certainly high quality. You will not be disappointed. Of course they won't change your photograph much either but, what the ...
Ralph, life is much too short to worry about whether your filter, lens or camera is the best that can be found. Buy what you need...or want, and take pictures.
Oh my god! Hush! You want to shut this site down from lack of posts and questions? You keep this up and people will start using their cameras more and posting here less!![]()
I posted a legitimate technical question. Apparently some of you Yahoos aren't up to the task.
I posted a legitimate technical question. Apparently some of you Yahoos aren't up to the task.
I thought my original answer was semi-legit, the better glass in the B+W I suspect will be better than the multi-coated filters.
All Hoya, B+W, Kenko and Tiffen filters are multicoated. Each and every manufacturer has their own proprietary methods and reasoning, and it does pay to read carefully, especially if you have invested a huge sum in a lens that for all intents and purposes will do better without any filters stuck on the front (especially Chinese crap). Filters are not so much items of floss and fab: they do have to minimise compromising lenses which are highly corrected (apo, asph.) and saying one filter is better than another at this is heretic: you simply don't know and in the shop you must have some form of experience and education to guide you. Putting a non- or monocoated filter on a $5,000 highly corrected lens will effectively hobble it because it will introduce spurious uncontrolled reflections between the front element and the filter that's one of the reasons filters have anything from 4 to 12 layers of coating.
Putting a non- or monocoated filter on a $5,000 highly corrected lens will effectively hobble it because it will introduce spurious uncontrolled reflections between the front element and the filter that's one of the reasons filters have anything from 4 to 12 layers of coating.
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