Digital Camera World

ND filter kits

See through a glass darkly with a neutralden­sity filter kit. We put the best to the test

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_ An essential piece of equipment for any landscape photograph­er – four kits face off

Neutral-density lens filters are enormously versatile, enabling you to easily create effects that are difficult or impossible to produce in editing apps. Two-stop and three-stop filters are popular for giving the option of using wide apertures under bright lighting conditions, so you can gain a tight depth of field without suffering overexposu­re due to the limitation­s of your camera’s fastest shutter speed.

Six-stop and 10-stop filters go further still, giving the possibilit­y of shooting long exposures even on a bright, sunny day. For example, where an aperture of around f/16 at ISO 100 gives you a shutter speed of 1/30 sec, a six-stop filter slows the exposure to two seconds, and a 10-stop filter gives you an even longer 30-second exposure.

A favourite use of high-power ND filters is to give a milky smoothness to the appearance of flowing water, from waterfalls and weirs to rapids. They’re equally adept at smoothing the choppy surface of rivers, lakes and the sea, as well as enabling clouds to appear to streak serenely across the sky. You can even use them to blur pedestrian­s out of bustling city street scenes.

One option is to use a ‘variable’ or ‘fader’ ND filter. These are based on two polarising elements. Twisting the filter’s adjustment ring rotates one element in relation to the other, enabling a progressiv­ely denser effect. Typically, you can expect a density range of around one to eight stops. However, image quality can be second-rate, and there’s no beating a top-notch ND filter for consistent, reliable performanc­e. Here we’ll take a look at what four leading kits have to offer. Matthew Richards

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