Our Association with Utah Olympic Legacy

Hi fellow skiers and snowboarders. Our website olyparks.org is a friendly funloving site,with bits of interesting news, touching on Winter Olympic hilites, skiing, snowboarding and other snow sports. We are not directly associated with The Utah Olympic Legacy. A portion of our site has some ski gear on sale, and great listings of new and used skiing,snowboarding and wintersport stuff. Enjoy the site as it has a mix of interesting reads. Thank you to The Utah Athletic Foundation for the awesome Utah Olympic Park and the funfilled activities that are available.

Polarized Lenses and Skiing

extreme skiing

Polarized Lens
Yeah , don’ t underestimate the glare of snow. Skiing means you’ re usually out there a good couple hours. Eye protection makes a huge difference. Polarized Lens are a plus.

I found an interesting article on camera lenses and taking photographs in the snow.You want good pictures to remember those blissful ski days. Here’s a good read…

Should I get a polarized lens filter for my camera?
I have a Canon xti with the standard 18-55mm lens that came in the kit. The guy at the camera store tried to sell me a polarized Tiffen filter, which I didn’t buy. Now I’m considering it. Is it necessary, and if so, what are the benefits? What are negative things that can come from using it? Can it be left on at all times for all shooting conditions? Right now I just have a hood, but am considering returning it for the filter. Any advice on what to do and what positive and negative effects the filter could have would be great. Short answer: You don’t need it.

A CPL (Circular Polariser) allows you to filter out polarised light. Effectively this lets you do several useful things:

It can make a sky turn a darker blue.
It can take the reflections off water, glass and reflective surfaces.
It also limits your light gathering ability so it can be used as a makeshift ND filter if you need one in a pinch.
It can also sometimes slightly alter the colour of other things such as foliage.

When using a CPL to darken skies, the effect is greatest when shooting at 90degrees from the sun. A word of warning: do not use a CPL to darken skies when using a lens any wider than your kit lens. This rarely gives anything other than a very uneven effect as the angle of view is too wide.

In some cases a CPL is a MUST, like when you need to reduce reflections but it’s not an essential piece of kit unless you have the specific needs mentioned above.

I definitely wouldn’t recommend leaving it on the lens all the time. All filters cause glare and ghosting, which can degrade your images and even show up as bright lights in your shot, especially when you have a strong light source in the shot.

If you want something to leave on your lens as protection, buy a good quality multicoated UV filter. Hoya are good. However, even very expensive filters can cause some glare, etc.

One thing you should know if you decide to get a CPL is that it won’t totally remove strong reflections from flash. Flash is pure non-polarised light and isn’t affected until it’s been polarised. If you do ever need to do such things then a second polariser can be fitted over your flash at 90 degrees to the one on your lens to give a flash lit picture with very little reflections, even when photographing things such as water.

Out of all these uses for a CPL, reducing reflections is the only one that can’t be done in post processing. For this reason, the CPL (along with ND filters) are amongst the few filters that are still useful in the digital age.

Goodluck!

EDIT: Holly9′s answer is partly incorrect. All filters, especially cheap filters and especially in bright sunlight can and will harm image quality. So even if you keep a UV protection filter on your lens, it is wise to remove it for important shots where there are bright light sources.

Also, Holly9s comment about UV filters filtering out UV light is also incorrect. Unlike in the film days, modern digital sensors are built with filters which block out almost all UV light. So a UV filter does nothing, at least not to UV light.
I like the selection on Ebay. I always check them first.


Zeal Optics Z3 Live Snow Goggles


Zeal Optics Z3 Live Snow Goggles


$648.95


Zeal Optics Z3 Goggle


Zeal Optics Z3 Goggle


$549.95


Zeal Optics Z3 Goggle


Zeal Optics Z3 Goggle


$549.95


Zeal Optics SPX Transcend GPS Enabled Snow Goggle Spherical Polarized Lens


Zeal Optics SPX Transcend GPS Enabled Snow Goggle Spherical Polarized Lens


$380.00


ZEAL OPTICS SPX TRANSCEND GPS ENABLED SNOW GOGGLES W/ POLARIZED LENS


ZEAL OPTICS SPX TRANSCEND GPS ENABLED SNOW GOGGLES W/ POLARIZED LENS “NICE”


$269.99


NEW 2012 OAKLEY SHAUN WHITE SPLICE SNOW WHITE RED W/ FIRE POLARIZED LENS


NEW 2012 OAKLEY SHAUN WHITE SPLICE SNOW WHITE RED W/ FIRE POLARIZED LENS


$239.99


SMITH I/OS SNOWBOARD & SKI GOGGLES White Foundation W Polarized Rose Copper Lens


SMITH I/OS SNOWBOARD & SKI GOGGLES White Foundation W Polarized Rose Copper Lens


$225.00


SMITH I/O SNOWBOARD & SKI GOGGLES Black Foundation W/ Polarized Rose Copper Lens


SMITH I/O SNOWBOARD & SKI GOGGLES Black Foundation W/ Polarized Rose Copper Lens


$225.00


NEW OAKLEY CROWBAR GOGGLE JET BLACK HI AMBER POLARIZED LENS SNOW SKI SNOWBOARD


NEW OAKLEY CROWBAR GOGGLE JET BLACK HI AMBER POLARIZED LENS SNOW SKI SNOWBOARD


$199.95


PANOPTX 7 EYE DIABLO BLACK FR W/ POLAR COPPER LENSES


PANOPTX 7 EYE DIABLO BLACK FR W/ POLAR COPPER LENSES


$178.95


 

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