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How-To: Landscapes

How to spin a pricey filter into pure gold.


September 2006


How-To: Landscapes
Photos by Donald Higgs

A typical polarizing filter reduces reflections and glare on windows, water, and other reflective surfaces. A polarizer also enhances the color of the sky and clouds. For nature photographers, this is a boon for shooting midday foliage, waterfalls, and streams.

But filter maker Singh-Ray goes the typical polarizing filter one better with its Gold-N-Blue Polarizer. This piece of high-end glass—priced from $190 to $220, based on size (direct, www.singh-ray.com)--renders those reflections as gold, or blue, or any combination of the two.

The result: images with a new dramatic dimension and much more color. Besides reflections, the Gold-N-Blue works great for landscapes, on vegetation—just about anywhere a conventional polarizer can be used. It's no surprise this filter has become one of the nature shooter's best friends.

PP0906_Landscapes_main2Here are three more things you should know about this very special polarizer:

You can sleep late. Even in harsh midday light, the Gold-N-Blue can provide an effect that's very close to the warm light of morning or the golden glow of the setting sun.

There'll be a learning curve. Predicting what this filter will do to the scene takes practice. Just look at the two very different pictures I took of the same scene. To get a sense of the effect, hold the Gold-N-Blue up to your eye and rotate it. You'll see the impact.

You need to choose a mount. The filter comes in a traditional screw mount. The bulkier—though in many ways more elegant—approach (since it makes it easy to add or subtract the filter) is a sprocketed mounting ring that slips into a common Cokin P-type filter holder.


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