D
Dinsdale
Guest
Guys,
I'm still a bit of a newbie and need some advice about UV filters etc.
One tip I got from a camera buff years ago was to protect my lens front element by putting either a UV or Skylight 1B filter on it. So like a good boy I've installed Hoya UV (digital) filters on all three of my lenses. Last night my lovely wife presented me (I'd been whinging) with a new Nikkor 35mm f1.8 lens... yum! Using it without a filter out in the garden I noticed the colours were much clearer, the focus was better and all round a better picture. Very pleased!
This got me thinking...
I've looked at the photos in these forums on a number of occasions and marvelled at the clarity of focus most of them have, whereas my photos never really grab me as being that well focussed. My questions therefore are:
I'm still a bit of a newbie and need some advice about UV filters etc.
One tip I got from a camera buff years ago was to protect my lens front element by putting either a UV or Skylight 1B filter on it. So like a good boy I've installed Hoya UV (digital) filters on all three of my lenses. Last night my lovely wife presented me (I'd been whinging) with a new Nikkor 35mm f1.8 lens... yum! Using it without a filter out in the garden I noticed the colours were much clearer, the focus was better and all round a better picture. Very pleased!
This got me thinking...
I've looked at the photos in these forums on a number of occasions and marvelled at the clarity of focus most of them have, whereas my photos never really grab me as being that well focussed. My questions therefore are:
- Are the UV filters affecting my autofocus and should I be using them as a matter of course?
- Is the effect of the UV filter worth the drop in focus quality?
- Am I just expecting too much from my lenses (Nikon AF-S Nikkor 18-135mm f/3.5-5.6G ED-IF; Nikon AF Nikkor 70-300mm f/4-5.6 G; Nikon AF-S DX Micro Nikkor 85mm F/3.5G ED VR) bearing in mind I'm using them on a D300S?
- None of the above, great focus will come with experience/time.