WTB: Lee Big Stopper
Re: WTB: Lee Big Stopper
Hi Tony - went to London the other day - met up with Nigel(s) and we wandered round town before going to see The Wall at the O2. Popped into Teamwork and had a quick looks at the LF stock - saw these. Ive no ideas as to how good /bad they are but a reputable brand, In stock and cheaper than a Lee :-
http://teamworkphoto.com/shop/index.php ... en1on324q1
regards Tim.......
http://teamworkphoto.com/shop/index.php ... en1on324q1
regards Tim.......
Digi-snapper now (finally) turned LF shooter hmm been doing this long enuff - Now LF photog !
Re: WTB: Lee Big Stopper
Thanks Tim
Not decided yet, but they are certainly in the frame. I must visit Teamwork some day if only to admire the LF stock.
Best regards
Tony
Not decided yet, but they are certainly in the frame. I must visit Teamwork some day if only to admire the LF stock.
Best regards
Tony
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Re: WTB: Lee Big Stopper
That's the new filter that Formatt told me about.TimH wrote:Hi Tony - went to London the other day - met up with Nigel(s) and we wandered round town before going to see The Wall at the O2. Popped into Teamwork and had a quick looks at the LF stock - saw these. Ive no ideas as to how good /bad they are but a reputable brand, In stock and cheaper than a Lee :-
http://teamworkphoto.com/shop/index.php ... en1on324q1
From doing some research on the web, I would advise that, whichever make of filter you get, at that density, you could find that total colour neutrality is difficult to find. And, whatever you do, don't expect them to give true colour with a CMOS digital camera chip

You obviously like living dangerouslyTony B wrote:I must visit Teamwork some day if only to admire the LF stock.

Reassure yourself - stroke an Ebony
Re: WTB: Lee Big Stopper
That's excellent - they had added exactly what I wished for. I am going to give this one a go rather than waiting for Lee to catch up with demand.Joanna Carter wrote:That's the new filter that Formatt told me about.
I wonder why would you say that? What is wrong with CMOS (or CCD) sensor colour reproduction?Joanna Carter wrote: From doing some research on the web, I would advise that, whichever make of filter you get, at that density, you could find that total colour neutrality is difficult to find. And, whatever you do, don't expect them to give true colour with a CMOS digital camera chip
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Re: WTB: Lee Big Stopper
All I know is that, on a Nikon D200, with a couple of 0,9ND filters and a polariser, I got a false infra-red colour effect on the image. I asked Formatt and they told me that it was the factory fitted filter in front of the chip that gave this problem.AlexeyD wrote:I wonder why would you say that? What is wrong with CMOS (or CCD) sensor colour reproduction?
Reassure yourself - stroke an Ebony
Re: WTB: Lee Big Stopper
How very professional of them to blame other equipment...Joanna Carter wrote:All I know is that, on a Nikon D200, with a couple of 0,9ND filters and a polariser, I got a false infra-red colour effect on the image. I asked Formatt and they told me that it was the factory fitted filter in front of the chip that gave this problem.AlexeyD wrote:I wonder why would you say that? What is wrong with CMOS (or CCD) sensor colour reproduction?
D200 has a CCD with a really dense IR cutoff filter which does not let a lot of IR in (so colour shifts due to IR are pretty much non existent). The cutoff filter does not affect the visible spectrum. The CFA array filters on a sensor are also much closer to RGB than on modern more sensitive DSLRs. I used D200 for the past 5 years and never had a problem with colours. It does need profiling of course especially when used with filters that introduce colour casts and WB can affect the image appearance and colour reproduction.
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Re: WTB: Lee Big Stopper
If you lived nearer you could borrow mine. I only use it in conjuction with the Cooke PS945 when I want to do close-up floral exposures, etc in bright light with the shutter between f4.5 and f8. That's the big downside of the Copal 3 shutter - the maximum 1/125th second shutter speed. 

Love is an Ebony mounted with a Cooke PS945.......
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Re: WTB: Lee Big Stopper
I was told that if I wanted to 'Do IR' I needed to get Nikon to adapt a D700 especially for IR use!!!AlexeyD wrote:How very professional of them to blame other equipment...Joanna Carter wrote:All I know is that, on a Nikon D200, with a couple of 0,9ND filters and a polariser, I got a false infra-red colour effect on the image. I asked Formatt and they told me that it was the factory fitted filter in front of the chip that gave this problem.AlexeyD wrote:I wonder why would you say that? What is wrong with CMOS (or CCD) sensor colour reproduction?
D200 has a CCD with a really dense IR cutoff filter which does not let a lot of IR in (so colour shifts due to IR are pretty much non existent). The cutoff filter does not affect the visible spectrum. The CFA array filters on a sensor are also much closer to RGB than on modern more sensitive DSLRs. I used D200 for the past 5 years and never had a problem with colours. It does need profiling of course especially when used with filters that introduce colour casts and WB can affect the image appearance and colour reproduction.



I'm still using my Olympus 5050Z instead - does excellent IR images.
HINT to NIKON: Could the D800 have a flippable filter infront of the CCD?
(In the meantime I'll use my F4 and Inford SFX)
Love is an Ebony mounted with a Cooke PS945.......
Re: WTB: Lee Big Stopper
Not Nikon - they don't do it. But plenty of others do that - LifePixels for example http://www.lifepixel.com/. You can buy a kit and do it yourself as well.Thingy wrote: I was told that if I wanted to 'Do IR' I needed to get Nikon to adapt a D700 especially for IR use!!!![]()
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That would be difficult to do - where would the filter go?Thingy wrote: HINT to NIKON: Could the D800 have a flippable filter infront of the CCD?
(In the meantime I'll use my F4 and Inford SFX)