07-09-2013 08:36 PM
07-09-2013 09:18 PM - edited 07-09-2013 09:19 PM
Many "effects" filters are no longer required as the effects can be applied with digital editing software... so while it's true that many filters are "a thing of the past", ND filters are _not_ actually "effects" filters. What they do cannot be simulated by editing an image.
An "good" ND filter wont change the look of the image itself... everything should appear sharp and without any color cast. What it does... is change your shooting CIRCUMSTANCES.
Suppose I'm shooting with an outdoor "fill" flash on a sunny day and my flash can't do "high speed sync" mode... so I'm limited to max flash sync shutters speeds of, say, 1/200th (this varies based on your specific camera model.) The "Sunny 16" rule says that I the normal exposure for full mid-day sun using f/16 is to use the inverse of the ISO as the shutter speed. So at a low base ISO of ISO 100, that'd be 1/100th. But the side-effect of f/16 is a _very_ broad depth of field and suppose I want a deliberately blurred background. I can increase the shutter to 1/200th and this will let me drop my f-stop to f/11... but that's still a LOT of depth of field and no nicely blurred background. If I wanted to bring that down to, say, f/4... I'd have to find a way to dump 3 full stops worth of light. I can't just drop the f-stop to f/4 and increase the shutter by 3 stops to 1/1600th because that's WELL beyond flash-sync speed and my flash (for purposes of this example) can't do high-speed sync.
One really great way to dump 3 stops of light so I can drop my f-stop down without having to speed up my shutter is... a 3 stop ND filter (sometimes called an ND 0.9 -- every "0.1" worth of density blocks 1/3rd of a stop of light.)
Another _VERY_ common use of the ND filter is to get shutters speeds much slower than possible without the filter.
Suppose I want to take a photo of a waterfall and I want a slow shutter so that I can have that gorgeously blurred dreamy looking water. At f/16 my shutter is still at 1/100th... I could go to f/22 and drop the shutter to 1/50th... but that's still pretty fast. If I used 5 stops I could get the shutter down to 1/4 second. A 10 stop ND (ND 3.0) would let me bring that down to 8 seconds...
The final images in these examples would still have the same amount of light and there'd be no tint or color-cast on the images... what you're REALLY doing is changing your shooting "circumstances" which allows you to use different exposure settings than would otherwise be possible without the filter.
Hope that helps!
Regards,
Tim
07-09-2013 09:36 PM
07-09-2013 10:11 PM
07-09-2013 10:07 PM
07-09-2013 10:47 PM
07-10-2013 02:17 AM
07-11-2013 03:09 PM
I don't know the nuances of "how" the CCD collects the light... only that it's basically counting a score for the amount of light recieved and that score is held digitally in the sensor while the exposure is being taken. When the exposure is finished, the data is "read out".
I believe all photo-sites are actually able to count up light values at the same time... not taking turns, but we'd have to rely on someone else for that info. I only know that the well-depth basically limits how hight that count can go before it overflows (any light received after it hits the cap is simply lost since it cannot count any higher.)
My partner and I had been speculating if there might be a way to create a long exposure mode which causes the sensor to sample light, pause, sample more, pause, etc. but do this rapidly so that in a 30 second exposure, the well-depth wouldn't overflow, but you'd get motion blur similar to what an ND fitler can do. I suppose it's possible... but the question is would it actually be as good and would it impact the price by more than the cost of an ND filter? There is such a thing as an "electronic shutter" where no mechanical shutter actually opens or closes... it's really "open" all the time but it's just digitally activating and de-activating. I seem to recall there was a technical reason why the mechanical curtain and leaf shutters are better than electronic shutters -- which is why high end cameras still have mechanical shutters, but low-end cameras use electronic shutters. In "image stacking" (very common among astro-imagers) you can do image stacking by "averaging" frames (which is used to eliminate noise even when shooting at very high ISO because real stars will appear as faint points of light but in the same spot in every frame whereas noise will appear as tiny specs but with random positions in each frame (and you can use "dark frames" or "dithering" techniques to eliminate any re-occuring noisy/stuck/hot-pixels.)) You can also do additive stacking... lots of short frames but you're just adding the amount of light frame after frame to simulate having taken a very long exposure. I suppose what you're looking for is something along those lines... lots of fractional short exposures, but stretched over time so that the small blur in each frame is added together until you get that soft dreamy look that the ND filter would have given you.
07-10-2013 12:15 AM
07-10-2013 02:29 AM
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