Sunday, September 28, 2008

When I first subscribed to a photo magazine many moons ago, they supplied me with a filter holder as my "free gift". At the time I'd bought a handful of filters but never really used them.

Knowing that our trip into the Mournes was going to involve a lake or a reservoir or some other body of water (just hopefully not my body in water), I decided to take them along.

In the end, I only remembered I had them two minutes before we left a rest stop at the side of a lake. I quickly pulled an ND filter (not a grad) from my kit and put it on the camera, just to see what would happen.

(f/18, 0.6sec, 13mm, ISO-200, 27/09/08)

Looking back now, I wish I'd taken the same shot without the filter, just so I could compare the difference. It wasn't this dark and I have a feeling the camera doesn't measure exposure well with a filter in front of the lens. Possibly it translates it as an evening shot and I should have pushed the shutter time up further to see the difference.

Still, as an experiment goes, I quite like the result. It's pretty amazing the effect a polariser and a long(ish) exposure can have on a body of water.

Post Date: Sunday, September 28, 2008 10:06:50 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
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Monday, September 29, 2008 8:15:33 AM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
A shot like that is pretty hard to meter as there will only be a slight difference between water and sky due to the reflection and the black mountains make it even more challenging. You could use a 0.3nd grad (1 stop) to make the clouds more punchy and balance the exposure a wee tad. My method for using a filter is to take an exposure reading of the foreground and then sky. Decide on the grad filter required and switch to full manual mode and make the adjustments as required.
Monday, September 29, 2008 8:15:23 PM (GMT Standard Time, UTC+00:00)
It's a lot darker looking than I remember it being in real life, but I do like the way the water looks like it is frozen.
Shereen
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