Polarizing filter acting as ND filter
SloYerRoll
Registered Users Posts: 2,788 Major grins
So I've gone through light science & magic several times and have a strong grasp of what polarized light is and how to control it.
Question:
If there is no polarized light in the shot your composing. Does the polarizing filter act only as a ND filter? I understand there's a certain amount of polarized light practically everywhere and it can't be escaped. I'm more interested in hearing the big picture of polarizing filters and if they only act as ND's in a non-polarized light environment. Or is there another impact to having this filter in front of your glass?
Question:
If there is no polarized light in the shot your composing. Does the polarizing filter act only as a ND filter? I understand there's a certain amount of polarized light practically everywhere and it can't be escaped. I'm more interested in hearing the big picture of polarizing filters and if they only act as ND's in a non-polarized light environment. Or is there another impact to having this filter in front of your glass?
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Good question...bump
Is this a "poor man's" ND filter as long as you don't have any polarized reflections?
― Edward Weston
I'm not sure how that would answer my question anyway. All I want to know is:
Light from a laser is unpolarized thus you can use it to answer your question.
Simply point a laser to a white sheet of paper and take a picture of the spot
on the paper with your camera. Then hold the polfilter betwen paper and laser
and repeat the picure (maunal mode, tripod mount). The laser must be the
only lightsource in the room. Then compare the two images on computer
and detect the difference in brightness. If the 2nd image is darker then
the polfilter acts as an ND filter on unpolarized light.
― Edward Weston
A good ND for waterfalls, will need to be 4 - 8 stops usually.
So, laser light is in phase, but not polarized??
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I'm asking if there's no polarized reflections (or the change in reflections are acceptable to the shot). Does the polarizer filter only act as an ND filter or are there other drawbacks to it that I don't know about?
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I was pretty sure this was the case. But it helps to know someone that can definitively answer the question.
It may be a weak ND filter. But it's two stops I didn't have before!
I'm so stoked I got my new camera bag. It's like the T.A.R.T.U.S. if your a "Dr. Who" fan (fits allot of stuff).
I'm still a bit interested in hearing about this laser thing though. I'm not buying one anytime soon since I need an ND filter nowD
Err doesn't seem to make sense. Light from a light bulb however
is unpolarized because it is produced by radiative emission
from the electrons in the bulb's wire and since there is no
preferred direction along which they could produce their
electric field the emmitted light is unpolarized. You could
also shoot into the sun and test how much light the filter eats.
― Edward Weston
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In a practical sense, this isn't an issue as one can simple correct the WB in post.
Given the hypothetical scene with NO polarized light, I would say that the CP would behave, and could replace, an ND filter. But, like you say, finding a scene with no polarized light will be virtually impossible.
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I just came across this thread and I'm not sure if this question was really answered completely.
Regular light (with no source that causes it to have a polarized bias) is "randomly polarized". Every light photon has a plane of polarization. Random polarization just means that each photon of light has a random orientation of it's plane of polarization such that there is an even distribution of all planes of polarization in the light, leading to an average of no net polarization when you average them all. It's kind of like white light. There's no such thing as white light. White light is just an even distribution of colors that all adds up to what we see as white.
Now, when you put a polarizing filter in front of randomly polarized light, it will block all the rays of light that have a plane of polarization that line up with the orientation of the polarizing filter and block none of those that are 90 degrees to it. For all the rest that are somewhere in between, it partially blocks them in proportion to how closely they do or don't line up with the filter. The net result is that a polarizing filter blocks half of randomly polarized light.
The other effects of using a polarizing filter are pretty much the same as using any filter.
- Imperfections in the filter glass can degrade the optical quality of your image.
- Transmissivity or absorbtivity of the filter glass can vary by wavelength, causing a color shift.
- Reflections off the filter glass surfaces can cause flaring or a loss of contrast.
- Extreme wide angle can have more light-fall-off at the edges with large apertures if the filter causes any vignetting
The first three items are usually much less of an issue in the better made (and more expensive) filters. The better filters are ground flatter, have their optical qualities of the glass tested to a small tolerance in the manufacturing process, use higher quality glass that has more constant properties with different wavelengths, use more involved ant-reflection multi-layer coatings to eliminate reflections at all different wavelengths, etc...If you have a high quality polarizer, I see no problem in using it as an ND filter. I've found that when I need an ND filter, a CP is usually not a strong enough ND filter (it's really only one stop in randomly polarized light). Usually, when I need an ND filter (like to blur a waterfall in bright light), I end up needing 3-4 stops. I've actually used a 3-stop ND + my CP to get a total of four stops.
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Everything you've said makes perfect sense. When said like that. I don't know how it could have ever been confusing.
Thanks for nailing this question!
Cheers,
-Jon
I've only had a polarizer for a week or so, and really had no clue how it worked or how to use it. In fact, I'd gone to the camera shop intending to buy an ND filter...it was the salesman that convinced me that a polarizer would be a better use of my money for the type of picture taking I do (mostly family vacations, lake views, etc....nothing professional).
Frankly, I forgot to check Dgrin for some tips on the use of polarizers and filters in general, but found this article on the web to be quite educational:
http://dpfwiw.com/polarizer.htm
There's even a link to a little applet that lets you interactively play with the incident light beam and the corresponding polarizer orientation to see what the effect is...pretty cool.