Hi! Great information I subbed! You mention vignetting when using 15mm and stacking filters, what does the vignetting look like and cant it just be corrected in a photo editor? I honestly would prefer to leave the Kase filter adapter on the 15-35mm so I was considering the 82mm lens but I'm concerned now.
I like the 18% Grey panels behind your monitor. I've painted a grey 6 foot by 6 foot square on the wall behind my monitor. Great for editing photo's & video's with the grey panels on the wall.
That's why I kept my office white / grey and didn't introduce much color other than from my photos, which I used as reference. It's good to calibrate the eyes ;-) PS: those panels also serve as sound panels to reduce echo. But I'd need much more to get good audio still. cheers
I recently bought the very filter system you introduce here. My impression (not a scientific test) is that the Kase polarizer does a very good job in optimal conditions, ie close to a 90° angle with the sun. In other situations, the polarizer effect is rather "meh", particularly compared with the Lee polarizer I used before. Do you have similar experiences?
I need to shoot more toward the sun with it still. But I already had the K9 Polarizer from kase and didnt have problems. I also had lee before. But toward the sun you only get good effect with any Polarizer when using wide angle Lens. In that case foreground is usually polarized well - with K9. But might be I am already too used to it.
You won't get vignetting for most lenses. The inlay ring allows you to make all your lenses magnetic at the front and you don't even notice. Every lens where you apply this ring can take magnetic filters. But, as I explain in the video, the use for me is limited. I have lenses with different sizes and I need step up rings. Also, for the 15mm lens I need a bigger filter to avoid vignetting. That's why I don't use the inlay. But for some people it might be fine. cheers