Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1999/05/23
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Dan Post wrote: > > Peter has a most reasonable explanation, and it's hard to disagree, but I > would add one caveat- USE A LENSHADE! Anytime you add an air to glass > surface, hanging that far into the light, you are just begging for some > flare! > Dan > From: Kotsinadelis, Peter (Peter) <peterk@lucent.com> snip > >Don, > > > >Water can destroy the coating on a lens if the lens is subjected to it for > >an extended period of time. Salt water will accelerate this, but only if > >left on the lens or over a period of time. > >If you were at the ocean and the lens were sprayed each day, I would say > >that in a few months you would see the coating start to change/dissolve. > >But if you clean the lens each day, preferably with an alcohol-type cleaner > >(Many lens manufacturers use an alcohol based cleaner for the lens > >elements.) the alcohol provides the added benefit of absorbing moisture as > >well. Hence, the possibility of coating damage is reduced. > > > >OTOH, if you were doing beach photography daily, IMO a UV or warming filter > >would provide a barrier to the salt water and also the sand. I am sure > >others may tell you otherwise, but why take the chance? A filter is cheap > >protection, and unless you blow up you prints to ungodly proportions you > >will not be able to see any difference. snip I also feel using lens shades is a lenes best protection. Since I usually do black and white I will usually have a yellow green on unless I am in a hand held low light indoor situation. It does more than take out UV better than a UV filter; it balances out the sky, trees the shadows next to them and skin tones all for the better. For me having to underexpose a neg just to avoid a white toneless sky makes for an awkward slower technique. A filter with real effect avoids that. To me a UV filter just adds a question mark as to what you are going to end up with. When there is lots of light or a tripod I'll bring the sky down and the trees up further by using a regular green not yellow/green and for all out glam the trees go black and the sky goes middle grey with a red filter. Mark Rabiner And redheads will lose their spots