43mm ND Filter ND1000 (10 Stop) Lens Filter 28 Multi-Layer Coatings Waterproof Scratch Resistant Super Slim for Camera Lens (Nano-Xcel Series)
SKU: KF01.999
I tried the ND1000 58mm on my Nikkor 50mm 1: 1.8G. It was really very bright and you can see what came out of nd filter in the photos. :) I can only recommend.
22/08/2023
This filter enables me to get dark picture effects when the sun is shining. Often times, stopping down does not produce the desired effect and the shutter speed is simply too short despite all efforts. With this filter it is possible to take long exposures with a reasonable aperture in bright light conditions. I am very satisfied with this filter and have no complaints whatsoever. At dusk the filter darkens too much and I would use a less intensive ND filter. This filter is my recommendation for hobby photographers! ... no idea whether a professional needs something else !?
Recordings during the day as if it were night!
Recordings during the day as if it were night!
13/08/2023
An ND1000 filter is particularly interesting for landscape photography. This can be used to draw waterfalls softly, for example. For this I used this filter a few times on vacation and was not disappointed. I've attached a sample photo. (River with lateral water drainage) The image quality is consistently the same over the entire photo. The darkening is also even. Have fun taking pictures!
Image quality is convincing with long exposure Image quality is convincing with long exposure Image quality is convincing with long exposure Image quality is convincing with long exposure Image quality is convincing with long exposure
Image quality is convincing with long exposure Image quality is convincing with long exposure Image quality is convincing with long exposure Image quality is convincing with long exposure Image quality is convincing with long exposure
23/05/2023
I just received this (52mm, for a Nikon 50mm f/1.8 on a D600) and it looks solid.
Initially, I had some trouble with the exposure. In a setting where aperture priority gave me 1/100s (w/o filter), I expected to get 10s shutter speed with the ND1000. However, the camera came up with ~1/5s - and the photo was almost black. It took me a while to figure out that the metering was affected by light coming in from the viewfinder. Once I covered that, the images were well-exposed (and I got the 10s, as expected).
I hope this saves others some time and worries (one hour in my case, plus the fear of having wasted $28 and not being able to understand my camera...)
Initially, I had some trouble with the exposure. In a setting where aperture priority gave me 1/100s (w/o filter), I expected to get 10s shutter speed with the ND1000. However, the camera came up with ~1/5s - and the photo was almost black. It took me a while to figure out that the metering was affected by light coming in from the viewfinder. Once I covered that, the images were well-exposed (and I got the 10s, as expected).
I hope this saves others some time and worries (one hour in my case, plus the fear of having wasted $28 and not being able to understand my camera...)
21/05/2023
To smooth out water in waterfalls or creeks, you need 9 or 10 stops of ND. The VND filters that go up to 400 are not enough.
19/05/2023