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Posted 20 hours ago

Moment CineBloom Diffusion Filter (72mm, 10%)

£9.9£99Clearance
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The CineBloom Filter, which is one of Moment’s latest filter releases, has been well received by reviewers, including myself. I didn’t walk all that far with my camera—going down a few blocks on one side of the road, and then back up on the other side. To diffuse this incoming light, we can either use light modifiers or filters – and both work differently. A diffusion filter gives halation with lights, creating a neutral “glow” around points of light, especially in low light scenarios.

The diffusion filters are designed to take the edge off the typical look created by digital sensors, soften the transition of light sources, and also smoothen skin tones for portraits. Will I carry it in my bag when walking around the city, in other words, when I go out shooting, will this be a stylistic addition to my work? I also have the 20% but unfortunately, wasn't able to use it because the lens I wanted to use it on was 2mm too small (35mm C mount).Based on my experiment, you’ll get a matte look on film during the day and the bloom effects when you’re shooting at night. I think it’s a stylistic approach that matches my vision, approach, and what I want out of photography. Good for all around subjects like portraits where you don’t want a too extreme look, but still want to soften those strong highlights. Tiffen Glimmer Glass 1 is the least extreme filter, it gives a small amount of bloom and pulls down highlight contrast slightly, but shadows seems to be the same. The diffusion filter also doubles as a bokeh enhancer making images look softer and the transition of bright light more pleasing.

Combining RitchieCam with a diffusion filter produces images with a filmic quality, and, because editing isn’t required, this process works well for those who don’t have time to post-process their pictures, or who only want to do quick adjustments. I have been shooting portraits for quite a while, and have been using the Cinebloom filter with 20% density for most of my portrait work. Here you really see how the halos around the direct lights shows, I much prefer the Tiffen halos, but of cause it’s not always a look you want. With portraits and lifestyle images, you’ll see smoother skin, and a reduction in sharpness and saturation, although at night, with the computational photography of the iPhone, my saturation was good.This article will explore those questions, and hopefully it will inspire you to do your own experiments with diffusion filters. These filters can be used for lifting contrast and also creating halation, or glowing effects to specular light sources in a scene.

I saw some examples of folks using this filter with their X100V and X100F cameras and I liked a lot of the results I saw. The glass itself is made by fusing a microlayer of NanoBlack particulates between two layers of top-grade Japanese filter glass, allowing us to maintain full image quality. I have been able to capture some beautiful memories for me and my family using the recipes found on Fuji X Weekly, coming to a point where I no longer have the need to edit anything, I can print the photographs directly from the camera and I know they come out fantastic. With a focus on Fujifilm photography, film photography projects, camera gears, travel journals, Hi-Fi audiophiles, hobbies, and reviews, Ivan’s blog offers a diverse range of intriguing content.Let me know in the comments which filters you use on your X100-series camera, because I’d love to know. Much will depend on how much of an effect you want to see from the diffusion filter but after my first outing with the 5% version I think I may prefer this over the 10% version. You can change your choices at any time by visiting Cookie preferences, as described in the Cookie notice.

This enables you to add a neutral density or variable neutral density filter on top to capture motion blur and shoot at cinematic frame rates. k. if referenced shortly or once in a while but I think we should live in a today's world and not try to mimicry the past. It’s different though, because it’s not really a nostalgic experience that I’m trying to capture, but rather the way many of us see the world around us today.

They claim you can capture dreamy, film-like, or cinematic-looking vibes straight out of your camera. Since I have done a fair amount of film photography lately it is becoming more and more apparent how my digital photos look in comparison.

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