Thanks, rite now, mostly vids.If you are shooting stills, you don't need ND filters at all.
If you are shooting stills, you don't need ND filters at all.
All that an ND filter will do for you (in stiills) is to reduce the shutter speed.I never knew this. How come bud?
I shoot a few more vids than stills, would the nd filters help me in bright sunlight or make better sunrise or sunset vids?+1 on what Meta4 said. ND filters are used when shooting videos to adjust the shutter speed (nominally, 2x the frame rate) without having to change the ISO. Except for some special situations, auto mode with no filter will usually give you very acceptable stills.
thanks RRThe NDs are only going to help in bright sunlight as mentioned above. They won't do anything in high contrast shoots like sunsets/sunrises. They don't changes the relative brightness of sunlit areas or shadows. No add on filter is really going to help there. For those types of shoots, you'll have to do some post-flight processing and that thanes some experience and good software?
All that an ND filter will do for you (in stiills) is to reduce the shutter speed.
Unless you particularly want to shoot a slower shutter speed than you can achieve using the aperture, there's nothing to gain by using ND filters.
Since we're talking in a forum about drones, five minute exposures aren't relevant here.That really depends on two things one would be the subject matter being shot and the other the camera being used. And I am not referring to UAVs either. Five minute long exposures will require ND filters as many cameras lenses cannot go above an f-stop of 22 and some cameras with a fixed lens cannot go above f/16.
Since we're talking in a forum about drones, five minute exposures aren't relevant here.
But if you are one of the 0.01% of flyers that for some reason want to shoot a very slow shutter speed in daylight, what I said covers that too.
Unless you particularly want to shoot a slower shutter speed than you can achieve using the aperture, there's nothing to gain by using ND filters.
We're saying the same thing.Even though the question was in regards to UAVs there are amateur photographers here as well.
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