Quick Tip: The Benefits of a Ultraviolet Filter

Quick Tip: The Benefits of a Ultraviolet Filter

Today we continue our series looking at different photographic filters. Having already covered Polarizing and ND filters, today we are looking at another one of the most important filters, the UV filter. UV filters reduce haziness created by ultraviolet lights, and can also act as a great protector for your expensive lens!


What Does a Ultraviolet Filter Do?

Put simply, UV filters reduce haziness created by ultraviolet lights.

Lets have a quick physics lesson. Ultraviolet light is electromagnetic radiation with a wavelength shorter than that of visible light, but longer than x-rays, in the range 10 nm to 400 nm. If you own a film camera then you might know the reason you use a UV filter.

It all down to colour film having 3 sensitive layers, one to red, one to blue and one to green (RBG). The blue layer responses to UV light as well as blue light, if you take an image which lots of UV light the blue layer becomes overexposed and your image takes a blue colour.

You can buy different strength UV filters, stronger UV filters will stop more blue light and will leave the image with a slight yellow tone.

ultraviolet uv filter


So Why Should I Get One for My Digital Camera?

So a UV filter is really useful to have on a film camera but why is it so important to have it on a digital camera? Because you are able to keep your UV filter on almost 99% of time you ever use your camera, the UV filter acts as perfect protection for the front of your lens.

Like most things in life there are advantages and disadvantages of using a UV filter to protect your lens.

Advantages:

  • Protects the glass on your lens from scratching
  • If sand/mud is blowing the filter will stop it from sticking to the glass
  • The filter can be removed and cleaned quickly and easily
  • The filter often helps weatherproof the lens (on the Canon L series for example)

Disadvantages:

  • Glare from the sun can spoil your images
  • Adding filters can cause a vignette to appear on your photos.
  • It might stop you from being able to use a lens hood

ultraviolet uv filter


What Else Can You Get Hold Of?

You could just use a clear filter. They just screw on and do nothing apart from protect your lens. They also bring the same advantages and disadvantages of UV filters (apart from not blocking UV light, obviously).

I personally find it harder to get hold of good quality clear filters than UV filters, plus they also tend to cost more.

ultraviolet uv filter


Brands I Would Recommend:

A UV filter is one of the rare screw-in filters I own. I normally only buy square filters, but because I wanted my UV on the lens almost all of the time, a square filter would not do the same job.

Please note the price of screw-in filter does depend on the thread size of the filter. The filter you want might be cheaper (or more expensive) than you think!

Cokin:

Tiffen:

Hoya:

B+W:

I would spend as much as you can on a UV filter, as quality does matter. If you place a $5 filter on a $1000+ lens the decrease in picture quality will be noticeable. Protect your lens without ruining quality by purchasing the best glass you can.

ultraviolet uv filter


I Hope That Helps!

If you have any questions about any other types of filter please post them below and I will try to offer some assistance. We’ll be covering a few more in future Quick Tips as well, so stay tuned!

Tags: Tips
  • Anthony

    Very interesting! I didn’t know…

  • http://www.peewee1002.co.uk Peter Sawyer
    Author

    Hey David/tuts team,

    Just to let you know I was the author of this article. Not the other regular Peter.

    Cheers

    Peter Sawyer.

    • http://davidappleyard.net David Appleyard
      Staff

      Sorted – sorry about that Peter!

  • http://www.colourscape.co.uk Studio Backgrounds

    I used to have a cheap one on my Canon but found it increased glare a quite a lot. I changed to a Cokin and found it solved the problem. It’s not always a wise Idea to try and save money that way !!

  • Darren

    Please grammar check and spell check before posting. It takes a few seconds and saves the reader of having to do it for you.

    Good article once it has been deciphered.

  • http://www.vaporizerkits.com Zephyr Ion

    Hey Pete,

    I enjoyed your past tuts. I like the fact you explained the benefits of UV filters, but I didn’t really ‘get’ it because there were no comparison images. For example, a side by side photo with and without the UV filter, etc.

    Thanks!

    • Meme

      Well the article says the only benefit for digital SLRs is protection?

    • http://peewee1002.co.uk Peter Sawyer

      Thank you, the point is there is really almost no difference but I will go out and shoot two identical shots in my garden now one with and one without and that way you will be able to compare.

      • http://www.peewee1002.co.uk Peter Sawyer
        Author

        http://img716.imageshack.us/img716/3966/uvcompare.jpg

        There you go. Shot with Canon 7D, 70-200mm L F4.0 lens for your info.

        Not much different really. That was the cheapest filter I had laying around as well, about £4 (GBP) of ebay.

  • http://www.mbtphotography.net Michael

    Each to their own but I’ve always questioned a UV filter. Even if it cost $100-150, I wouldn’t open the door to image quality issues from a UV filter on a $1000+ lens. I’ve never used one and i’ve never scratched my front element because I’m careful. I shoot at the beach, in the snow, in damp/ humid conditions and everything in between and any small variances from UV light can be fixed in post production very easily, especially if it’s a RAW image. I would trust the seals on my pro body and L lens before a screw-in filter for weatherproofing any day. In my opinion, the perfect cover for the lens if your worried, is the supplied lens cap. Put a hood on the lens and then it protects it from bumps as well.

    • http://wet-photo.blogspot.com/ WET

      “Put a hood on the lens and then it protects it from bumps as well.” – That is only partly true. I agree, the lens hood of my Tamron 70-300 protects the front of the lens very good since it is about 4.5 centimeters long BUT the lens hood of my Sony 18-70 is just 1 centimeter long so it does not really protect the lens.

      “i’ve never scratched my front element because I’m careful.” You’re right. Most of the scratches can be avoided by being extremely careful but at some point you’re out of luck and you WILL scratch your front lens. And at that point you’re happy to have a UV filter on your lens. Certainly you have way more experience than I have but maybe you should reconsider this issue.

      Sadly I can only talk about image quality of cheap lenses (as mentioned before, I own a Tamron 70-300 and the Sony kit lens) but I don’t see any difference when using a UV filter. No vignetting, no quality loss, etc.
      Therefor I’d be very thankful if YOU could try a high quality filter on your € 1,000+ lenses and post a comparison. Like you said, you’ve never used one so maybe you’ll see that there is no quality loss. And if there is a loss, you could inform us ;-)

  • http://www.mbtphotography.net Michael

    As I said at the start, it’s just my opinion and my choice not to use them. If it gives you peace of mind, go for your life.

    I have no need to “reconsider the issue” as you tell me to, cause if i scratch the front element it will be a stupid mistake, not running out of luck as you suggest, and that it “WILL” happen. Being careful avoids mistakes and trust me, when you have a spent good money on an expensive lens your very careful and don’t make mistakes. In addition, the issue of having your expensive gear insured is essential and this gives you all the peace of mind you need.

    It not a question of quality loss as you suggest, it’s is why waste the money on an ‘expensive’ UV filter for every lens you own which could have you spending many hundreds of dollars on UV filters just in case something happens. I would rather spend the money on a gear upgrade, but as I said, if you gives you peace of mind knock yourself out and spend the money.

  • http://gfhfvg gdrgt

    nice ………………..