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Review Summary
2011-12-25T19:00:00
I purchased this filter for use with my 67 45mm wide angle and 300mm lenses, and because of the quality it's manufacturer is famous for. It is made of the best metals and multicoated opticle glass. I use it to remove glare,saturate colors, and reduce the amount of light entering the lens when necessary.
Kim
2011-11-06T19:00:00
I wish I would have spent the extra money and bought the multi-coated Polarizer filter. I experience a lot of halos, ghosting, circular areas with loss of contrast when I shoot interiors with this filter. I use the polarizer to try and remove reflections in the shinny furniture, walls and glass. The light put out by the fixtures in the ceiling cause 85 percent of the problems where the other percent is usually caused from the light coming in through windows. How do I know this filter is causing these problems is I can remove the filter from the lens and the problems go away. I also always try and use my lens hood.
BRYAN T.
2008-12-28T19:00:00
If you got a pro lens, you got to use this pro filter. Great construction. High quality piece of glass. Can never go wrong with B+W.
Quox
• Polarizer filters evenly increase color saturation of all colors (except black and white), creating deep, rich scenics.
• They add contrast for dramatic skies and ariel shots.
• Polarizers also eliminate glare from highly reflected surfaces like glass and water.
• Polarizers are two part lenses that rotate, allowing you to select the degree of additional saturation, contrast and glare reduction desired.
•They come in two varieties.
• Circular-for all types of cameras (required for beam splitting metering systems commonly found in auto-focus SLR's and in most current TTL Slr's; check your camera's manual).
• Linear-for rangefinders and older SLR metering systems.