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EOS 90D Filter recommendations for 18-55mm and 18-35mm lenses

dcreme
Apprentice

Hello hive of knowledge. I have the canon 90D with the accompanying 18-55mm and 18-35mm lenses. I am a complete amateur when it comes to photography so please excuse what may sound like silly questions.

I use the camera to photograph oil paintings and reference images for my art. I have real problems with glare and photographing dark areas in the paintings. I use 3000-6000 kelvin lights with two softbox lights at 45 degree angles. Any advice on which filters might fix this? I thought a polarizing filter but I want to keep the original colours true. Also I am planning a photoshoot with dancers and therefore a lots of movement. It will be in a studio with studio lighting (soft boxes) and white background, Any advice for camera setting to get the best results?

Any advice will be gratefully accepted.

5 REPLIES 5

jrhoffman75
Legend
Legend

@dcreme wrote:

Hello hive of knowledge. I have the canon 90D with the accompanying 18-55mm and 18-35mm lenses. I am a complete amateur when it comes to photography so please excuse what may sound like silly questions.

I use the camera to photograph oil paintings and reference images for my art. I have real problems with glare and photographing dark areas in the paintings. I use 3000-6000 kelvin lights with two softbox lights at 45 degree angles. Any advice on which filters might fix this? I thought a polarizing filter but I want to keep the original colours true. Also I am planning a photoshoot with dancers and therefore a lots of movement. It will be in a studio with studio lighting (soft boxes) and white background, Any advice for camera setting to get the best results?

Any advice will be gratefully accepted.


A quality polarizing filter should allow you to remove glare without impacting color fidelity. Since true color is important for your use I recommend that the first image you take in a session include a gray card or color checker chart that you can use to adjust white balance when you process your images. 

John Hoffman
Conway, NH

R6 Mark II, M200, Many lenses, Pixma PRO-100, Pixma TR8620a, Lr Classic

Hi John, that’s for the tips. Any suggestion for which filter in particular?

dcreme
Apprentice

*thanks for tips..

jrhoffman75
Legend
Legend

Breakthrough and B+W are two quality brands. 

John Hoffman
Conway, NH

R6 Mark II, M200, Many lenses, Pixma PRO-100, Pixma TR8620a, Lr Classic

normadel
Elite
Elite

Be sure to get a CIRCULAR polarizer, not an old-style linear polarizer. This refers to the orientation of the polarizing line pattern, not the shape of the filter.

Using a polarizer can be awkward if the lens has a front element that rotates when focusing........you need to be focused before adjusting the polarizer.

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