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vibrating in a plane parallel to the axis of the grid lines. perpendicular to the vibration direction of the light, the polarized light is greatly absorbed. When the rodlike crystals are parallel to the vibration direction of the polarized light, the polarized light is almost totally is not present in a scene, polarizing filters can be used to reduce the intensity of light. When two polarizing filters are used, their combined densities can be varied considerably. colors in the scene is to use a polarizing filter. You can effect by viewing the scene through the viewfinder of a single-lens reflex (SLR) camera or by viewing the scene through the ground glass of a view camera. To see how much reflection control you are getting, rotate the filter as you are viewing the scene. rotation of the filter. When the reflection cannot be completely eliminated, try changing your camera angle surface reflections and greatest reduction of light intensity occurs when two polarizing filters are used with their optical grids perpendicular to each other. This arrangement can be either two filters in tandem in front of the camera lens or one filter in front of the light source and another filter in front of the camera lens. You cannot control reflections from bare metal surfaces because the reflected light is not polarized. prevalent in distant scenes and in scenes photographed on heavily overcast days or in open shade. A skylight exposed under the above conditions. A skylight filter is light pink in color. for this absorption and the loss of light, you may have to increase the exposure to compensate for the light absorbed by the filter. A numerical value is assigned called a "filter factor" or multiplying factor. This numerical factor is based on several variables that include the color sensitivity of the film, density of the filter, color of the filter, and color temperature of the light source. As these variables change, the filter factor also changes to produce the correct exposure consistently. Filters are often identified as "2 X yellow" or "4 X orange." That implies that the filter factor is 2 always remain constant when conditions change. content of blue light that is readily transmitted by the blue filter. Thus, with the same film and filter combination and with the same camera shutter speed A filter that absorbs a lower amount of illumination from the same light source is assigned a smaller filter factor. original calculated exposure (without a filter). This increase in exposure is determined with a filter factor. When a filter has a factor greater than 1, an adjustment to the exposure must be made. the film is 100, the effective film speed is 50 produces the equivalent of 1 f/stop of additional exposure. the filter factor. Basic Photography Course |
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