Center
Spot Filters:
Center
Spot: How often do you get just the background
you want? Not often enough? Take a different approach to
this distracting problem by softly diffusing only the
background, leaving the area of central interest clear
and sharp, with the Center Spot filter.
Warm
Center Spot: Combines the benefits of the Center
Spot with the added warmth of the 812 Filter
Centri
Clear: Clear central area within an outer filter
effect draws attention to whatever appears within it.
Available in two shapes: Circle and Ellipse in four
clear-opening sizes. Filter effects include ND 0.6 and ND
0.9
Clear:
Helps protect your lens from dust, scratches, dirt,
moisture, fingerprints and more.
Close-up
Lens: Focus much closer than your standard lens
allows. Great for detailed photos of nature, stamp
collections, and a wide range of other situations.
Available in several diopter strengths. (See Split-Field
Lens)
Color
Compensating (CC): Make adjustments to the red,
blue or green characteristics of light, correcting for
color balance, light source variations, different
reversal film batches, and other color effects. They are
available in density variations of Cyan, Magenta, Yellow,
as well as Red, Blue, and Green filters.
Color-Grad:
The hardest thing about landscapes is that the sky is
often two stops brighter than the foreground. The
Color-Grad ND 0.6 is just the thing to bring bath into
proper exposure balance. Capture all the wondrous detail
in the clouds while retaining the right exposure on the
ground below. Half color, half clear, with a soft
transition between, Color-Grads can best be used in a
rotating mount or filter holder, for proper alignment in
the image. For more dramatic color, try a Sunrise or Blue
Color-Grad. Color-Grads come in many colors and
densities.
Color-Grad
Complements: Using a Color-Grad to add color to
the sky can often look even better when a complementary
tint is added to the foreground. Designed to be used
together with a Color-Grad in this manner, or to add a
bit of color interest on their own, Complements come in 3
color series: Blue for use with Tropic Blue, Cyan, Cool
Blue, Grape, Blue and Twilight; Red for use with Plum,
Magenta, Cranberry, Pink, Red, Skyfire, and Twilight; and
Amber for use with Chocolate, Sepia, Coral, Tangerine,
Tobacco, Straw, Antique Suede, Skyfire and Sunset. Each
series comes in two grades, Grade 1 provides milder
tones; Grade 2 is for more dramatic color.
Combination
Colors: Several filter combinations are so
popular that they are produced as two filter effects in
one. These include: Neutral Density or Polarizer plus 81
or 85 Wratten filters; the Polarizer plus ENHANCING
filter; the Warm versions of Pro-Mist, Soft/FX, and Black
Pro-Mist filters, and others.
Contrast
Control Filters:
Low
Contrast: When the sun is too bright and the
shadows too dark, you can't get good detail in both at
the same time. Low Contrast filters gently flare
highlights to add some detail to the shadows, for a more
pleasing image. The various densities can finely tune
contrast, or create an almost pastel-like color
desaturation.
Soft
Contrast: Low Cons but with a one-stop neutral
density filter added. Without exposure-compensating, this
will reduce excess highlight brightness, and subtly
lighten shadows, while allowing you to maintain your lens
setting for more consistent sharpness and depth-of-field.
Ultra
Contrast: Often, you have no control over harsh
lighting, especially outdoors. Get that control back with
the Ultra Contrast filter. An exclusive award-winning
Tiffen filter, it allows the image to render more detail
in the shadows without causing any flare or halo effect
from bright light sources, reflections or highlights. It
uses ambient scenic light to lower contrast evenly
throughout the whole scene, while maintaining critical
sharpness throughout.
Low
Light Ultra Contrast: All the effects of the
Ultra Contrast filter, for use in low light situations.
Coral:
Many densities of a warming color similar to the Wratten
85. Used to maintain a consistent color outdoors
throughout the day, to extend shooting hours, or to make
creative variations.
Day-for-Night:
Get the appearance of night while shooting in daylight.
Typically used with about one-stop underexposure from
UNFILTERED settings.
Use
the Cool Day-for-Night:for a blue
moonlight
Monochrome
Day-for-Night is used with subsequent color
timing to create a more silvery-moon effect.
Decamired:
Takes the guesswork out of determining color temperature.
Acts as a conversion filter for color temperature
adjustments from any point to any other point in the
color temperature scale. Can be used to create proper
coloration in unusual situations, and to make creative
alterations. Applications include keeping color
temperature constant during the course of the day and
producing the effect of different times of day. Available
in two series, reddish filters that warm the light and
bluish filters that cool the light. Each series contain 4
densities: 1-1/2, 3, 6 and 12. Filters in the same series
can be combined.
Diffusion/FX
Filters: Gives a silky-smooth look to textured
surfaces; suppresses facial blemishes and wrinkles while
maintaining a clear, overall in-focus image. Produces a
minimum of highlight flare that would otherwise signal
the presence of a filter. Comes in Black or Gold series,
each available in several grades.
Black
Diffusion/FX: Provides the key features above.
Gold
Diffusion/FX: Provides the key features above
while adding a soft, golden tint to shadows and infuses
images with special warmth.
Warm
Black Diffusion/FX: Same benefits as Black
Diffusion/FX with the added warmth of the 812 filter.
812:
The ideal cosmetic skin tone \i\fs18 enhancer, it works
everywhere, but is especially needed with electronic
flash or in outdoor shade, situations where the color
cast would otherwise be excessively blue.
ENHANCING:
The ENHANCING filter creates warm vibrant color by
selectively improving saturation of reds and oranges,
with minimum effect on other colors. A must have for fall
foliage, and for getting the greatest color punch from
warm-tones, such as brick and barn reds and oranges.
Fluorescent
Light Color Correction: For more natural color,
eliminating the green cast under average fluorescent
lighting.
FL-B
Filter: for use with tungsten film or video
cameras set for tungsten balance.
FL-D
Filter: for use with the daylight film or video
cameras set for daylight balance.
Fog
Effects: Makes highlights glow and mist to
appear where none previously existed. Available in
several grades.
Double
Fog: Stronger grades produce realistic natural
fog effect. Subtler grades tone down saturation and
contrast.
Haze
2A Filter: Reduces excess blue caused by haze
and ultra-violet rays. Provides the greatest ultra-violet
correction of the haze filters. Adds some warmth to the
visible colors. Ideal for mountain, marine and aerial
work.
LL-D:
Allows use of tungsten film in daylight without exposure
compensation, as for low-light situations. For use with
negative film for motion picture photography in
conjunction with an optical printer.
Neutral
Density Filter: Used to reduce the amount of
light reaching the film with no selective absorption
effects on colors. Available in several densities.
Polarizing
Filters: Reduces glare and reflections,
saturates colors and darkens blue skies. Ideal when
photographing into water or through glass to reduce
reflections. The polarizer can be rotated to determine
the degree of reflection reduction. For outdoor scenes,
rotate the polarizer to change blue sky densities from
light to dark, creating dramatic contrast between sky
blue and cloud white. Comes in two forms:
Linear
Polarizer: standard version for non-autofocus
still cameras or camera systems without internal
polarizing optics.
Circular
Polarizer: Designed for all cameras, but
especially still cameras with autofocus, or others with
beam splitting internal optical systems, like using a
video tap. The circular polarizer works just like the
linear, except that it doesn't adversely affect the
function of these systems.
Ultra
Pol Polarizers: The highest polarization
efficiency available. Maximum reduction of reflections
and unwanted glare and for maximum color saturation.
Available in Ultra Pol Linear and Ultra Pol Circular
Polarizers.
Pro-Mist:
Knocks the edge off of sharpness, subtly flares
highlights providing an almost halo-like glow, with a
mild reduction in contrast. Great for most subjects where
depicting raw harsh reality is not desirable.
Warm
Pro-Mist: Combines the Pro-Mist with the 812
filter. Tones down excessive sharpness, while adding
warmth to the scene. Balances contrasting skintones
within one scene.
Black
Pro-Mist: Image softening with more subtle flare
than an equivalent graded Pro-Mist.
Warm
Black Pro-Mist: Combines the Black Pro-Mist with
the 812 filter. Softens image with subtle flare, while
adding warmth.
Sepia:
Often, when color isn\rquote t interesting enough, the
best thing to do is to warm it up like photographers did
early in the past century. Sepia #1 offers mild brownish
warmth. The Sepia #2 is the same stronger brown tone as
the Sepia #3 but the latter includes a fog effect that
also softens and flares highlights. This combination
comes in useful for portraits, period scenes, and many
other situations.
Softnet
Filters: Often used in the early Glamour days to
create the flawless faces of the Stars, a modern update
made of special fine net laminated between clear optical
glass.
Softnet
Black: The standard. Available in several
densities.
Softnet
White: Also softens contrast. Available in
several densities.
Soft/FX
Filters:
Soft/FX:
Long the standard for portraits and close-ups. Tiny
lenslets embedded in the glass provide a strong
detail-hiding effect when it's needed. They can modestly
flare highlights, and do a great job on diminishing fine
details, yet leaves the overall appearance in-focus.
Available in several grades
Warm
Soft/FX: Combines the Soft/FX filter with 812
filter. Softens unwanted details while adding warmth and
balance to skintones.
Solid
Color Special FX: A variety of solid-color
versions of our Color-Grad colors provide subtle or
strong color for creating many special effects.
Standard
Colors: A wide array of Wratten and other colors
for the most comprehensive image control.
Split-Field
Lens: A close-up lens cut in half. Focus
close-up on one portion of the scene while retaining
sharp focus on a more distant background. The ultimate
depth-of-field extension lens. To use, focus on the
background, and then move in or out the slight distance
required to focus on the foreground. With the proper
choice of lens focal length and diopter strength,
Split-Field lenses can produce a variety of fascinating
scenes. Can also blur part of the scene, leaving the
other half sharp. Available in several diopter strengths.
Star
Effects: Makes the most interesting use of
lights in the scene. Turns points of light, either from
reflections, bulbs, candles, etc. into sparkling starlike
patterns. Use either the standard 4 or 6 point
star, or try the more unusual Vector Star, an
eight point star with lines at asymmetrical angles, for
an even more exciting effect. Make streetlights, holiday
lights and most things shiny gleam! The star filter is
made of clear optical glass, which contains lines
engraved on the glass surface, forming grid patterns. The
closer the line spacing in the pattern, the stronger the
star effect.
A
2mm grid produces a strong-lined star. The 3mm and 4mm
grids are more subtle, yet produce finely outlined stars.
The 3mm grid offers a slightly broader star than the 4mm
grid. The Vector Star, Hyper Star, Hollywood Star
and North Star have asymmetrical designs
with lines of different brightness, for a more natural
effect. They are often great in combination.
Streak
Effect: 2mm, 3mm grid - A special Star effect,
producing a straight line of light running through the
source.
Wratten
is a registered trademark of the Eastman Kodak Company.
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