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Using Welding Glass as a 10 Stop ND Filter
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Topic: Using Welding Glass as a 10 Stop ND Filter (Read 1508 times)
TheRaven
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Posts: 619
"I am female, I think the boobs are a giveaway..."
Using Welding Glass as a 10 Stop ND Filter
«
on:
12 April 2013, 12:52 »
Well, I paid £1.50 for a piece, roughly equivalent to a 10 stop, but causes a terrible green hue, so B&W is pretty much necessary unless you can recover it.
Basically my Sony A200, 18-70mm kit lens, tripod, wired remote, welding glass. The glass I glued onto a ring from a lens hood that I removed. now it just screws onto the front!
Welding Glass ND filter set up
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Raven Photography by Jenna Goodwin
, on Flickr
I'm quite chuffed with this, first attempt on a murky evening, I imagine a bright sunny day would be better. Any tips for improvement?
Welding Glass ND filter test
by
Raven Photography by Jenna Goodwin
, on Flickr
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Professional Freelance Equestrian Photographer
www.ravenphotography.co.uk
www.ravenphotography.uk
thatwillis
I live here
Posts: 669
Re: Using Welding Glass as a 10 Stop ND Filter
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Reply #1 on:
12 April 2013, 14:59 »
Ahhh nice idea! Does the job nicely. ND filters arn't cheap. I do want to get some tho.
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Diamond Hell
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Posts: 7,997
Opinions я Us
Re: Using Welding Glass as a 10 Stop ND Filter
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Reply #2 on:
12 April 2013, 15:09 »
I got a pack of filters that cost around £20 last Christmas.
They are great fun and the results are top, if you like landscape photography.
The Cokin types I have mean you can stack a couple, getting near to a 10-stop filter.
I think this was a pair of filters, stacked:
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TheRaven
I live here
Posts: 619
"I am female, I think the boobs are a giveaway..."
Re: Using Welding Glass as a 10 Stop ND Filter
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Reply #3 on:
12 April 2013, 16:05 »
Nice! I didn't want to spend anything in it really as I may not enjoy it/want to continue it. But, if I do I will buy a decent filter, but for a few quid it's great to give an idea of exposure times, focusing, set up, results, what to expect etc.
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Professional Freelance Equestrian Photographer
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