H&Y K-series FIXED ND MRC Rear-Drop in for KH-100 / KC-100 Holders 95mm NO CPL (three types)

Economisez £55.60

Style: ND 64 (6-stop reduction) without CPL
Prix:
Prix réduit£83.40 Prix normal£139.00

Description

  • 95mm drop-in Neutral Density
  • Made using high-quality SCHOTT B270 glass
  • Even light attenuation
  • Double-sided vacuum coatings
  • Only works with KH100/KC100 holders

K-series | Drop-in ND Filter

 

H&Y Drop-in ND Filter for K-series Magnetic Holder is made of high-quality SCHOTT B270 glass. Double-sided vacuum coatings allow even light attenuation.

In addition to our 100x100mm and 100x150mm filters, you can drop in a 95mm circular filter encased in a lightweight aluminium frame. This adds additional versatility to photography. In a multitude of categories within photography and videography, by being able to use Circular Polarising filters, as well as solid ND filters including 6 and 10 stops. Long exposure photography and better depth-of-field control would be possible while stacking multiple graduated filters using our patented magnetic holder system.

 

Benefits of Using Drop-in Filters

  • Amazing combinations of filter choices can be made with rectangular filter
  • Easy switch between CPL/ ND/ CPL&ND/ Night Filters
  • Reframing/ recomposing a picture becomes very easy (ND filter can be removed at anytime)
  • Highly rotatable CPL even with rectangular filter installed

Simple Operation

ND filter

What is Neutral Density (ND) Filters?

Instead of reducing the aperture to limit light, you can add a Neutral Density filter to limit light, and can then set the shutter speed according to the particular motion desired (blurring water movement, for example) and the aperture set as needed (small aperture for maximal sharpness or large aperture for narrow depth of field (subject in focus and background out of focus). Using your camera, you will see the image right away and can choose the best ND filter to use for the scene being captured by first knowing the best aperture to use for maximal sharpness desired. The shutter speed would be selected by finding the desired blur from subject movement. The camera would be set up for these in manual mode, and then the overall exposure adjusted darker by adjusting either aperture or shutter speed, noting the number of stops needed to bring the exposure to that which is desired. That offset would then be the amount of stops needed in the ND filter to use for that scene.

What Our ND can do for you?

With ND filter
Without ND filter

 




ND(3-6stops) +CPL

ND (10-16stops)

StarKeeper Night Filter





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