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MadFrankie
25-02-2010, 14:50
Hi,

After some pretty in-depth research and help from you wonderful forum people, I'm pretty comfortable now to go for Lee Filters.

However, with the wide range of options available, can anyone give me some real life experience about what actual filters to go for.

I take mainly landscapes and sun rise / set shots. I want to get some hard and soft grads but would 0.3, 0.6 and 0.9 be good enough or is the 0.9 / 3 stops not really enough???

:shrug:

scarey
25-02-2010, 14:56
I purchased the Lee filters in the sets of three but find I rarely use the 0.3 (1 stop). You could purchase individual 0.6 and 0.9 filters. Remember that you can use more than one filter at once. So a 0.6 and a 0.9 used together would give would give you 5 stops.

MadFrankie
25-02-2010, 14:59
Ah yes, a very good point I hadn't even thought of...doubling up on filters...

I did think the 0.3 was a bit pointless and I was wondering about the 0.6 but now you've got me thinking it can be used as a 'multiplyer' it might be worth while.

Thanks for your thoughts.

FFO
25-02-2010, 15:10
I'd say go for a .6 & .9 soft plus the .9 hard. You can us the .6 soft stacked with the hard on a seascape if need be.

I've the .03 .6 & .9 soft set but hardly used the .3

User Name
25-02-2010, 15:45
The Lee Filters' book "Inspiring Professionals" is worth buying too. They show you a landscape and a simple graphic of how the filters were used. Sometimes they use an ND grad for the sky as normal, and another ND grad inverted for the foreground.

Good luck finding any filters at the moment though! I am still waiting on NDs and hard grads from Morco for 2 months now.

Freester
25-02-2010, 15:50
The Lee Filters' book "Inspiring Professionals" is worth buying too. They show you a landscape and a simple graphic of how the filters were used. Sometimes they use an ND grad for the sky as normal, and another ND grad inverted for the foreground.


:thumbs: Good advice. You'll be surprised in the book how often a hard is used when you would imagine a soft would be the order of the day.

I recently bought a Lee Filter set and a 0.3, 0.6 and 0.9 hard. I haven't used the 0.3 yet. The 0.6 and 0.9 have been used but the 0.9 can look a bit unreal if not used with care.

Also get a 2 stop ND if you want to do longer exposures on say water during the day :)

pragmatist
25-02-2010, 16:13
I use a 0.6 hard grad and 0.9 and also the 0.9 proglass, Just perfect. The 0.3 is not really worth paying out for.

Strobe
25-02-2010, 16:23
I recently invested in some Lee's - used www.robertwhite.co.uk as they are fairly local to me. Had everything in stock and got some good advice over the counter. I have the 2-stop ND soft (landscapes), 3-stop ND hard (seascapes) and 3-stop ND Pro-Glass (expensive but quality).

puddleduck
25-02-2010, 17:32
A 0.6 and 0.9 are pretty essential.

Don't dismess Hitech - remember these are just thin bits of plastic or glass, and one brand will do the same as the other here.

Peter10d
25-02-2010, 17:38
A 0.6 and 0.9 are pretty essential.

Don't dismess Hitech - remember these are just thin bits of plastic or glass, and one brand will do the same as the other here.

Another vote for Hitech. Much better that pervious experience with Cokin.

scarey
25-02-2010, 17:44
The Lee Filters' book "Inspiring Professionals" is worth buying too. They show you a landscape and a simple graphic of how the filters were used. Sometimes they use an ND grad for the sky as normal, and another ND grad inverted for the foreground.


Yes the Lee book is certainly worth having.

Don't dismess Hitech - remember these are just thin bits of plastic or glass, and one brand will do the same as the other here.

In principle yes but Cokin are renowned for producing a magenta cast. I've heard good reports on the Hitech but haven't used them myself.

Merc
25-02-2010, 18:42
I've always bought my Lee filters from http://www.studiokitdirect.com/ Next day delivery and very nice people to do business with.

As said above.... I have 0.3 0.6 0.9 Not often i use the 0.3 but somtimes i'm glad i've got it. Also if you buy all 3 as a set they are a little cheaper and you get a nice case and soft insert for them.

sjh2008
25-02-2010, 18:47
:thumbs: Hitech filters almost the same quality as Lee but half the price

ShrubMonkey
25-02-2010, 19:04
Looks like Lee Filters are not in stock anywhere. This supply problem seems to have been going on for a while, not great for business :gag:

Maybe I'll look at Hitech...

markta
25-02-2010, 19:30
Looks like Lee Filters are not in stock anywhere. This supply problem seems to have been going on for a while, not great for business :gag:

Maybe I'll look at Hitech...

www.robertwhite.co.uk might have some in (well according to a recent thread they did a few days ago).

Lee Filters are the top filters in terms of quality, closely followed by Hitech and Singray in most opinions respected and not so..

MadFrankie
25-02-2010, 21:25
Thanks guys, on my way to spend all my money on filters!

ooh, 100 posts...