Photography Asked on July 13, 2021
I am attempting to work out, conceptually, how the use of a neutral density filter effects the resulting captured image.
Do ND filters allow a camera to capture higher contrast scenes (without clipping the highlights) than would otherwise be possible? Or do they just decrease the amount of light uniformly so that highlight detail is gained at the expense of shadow detail being lost?
Put more technically, is the effect of a ND filter more like a linear mapping or a clipping of the low light levels? See the figure below for examples of each.
Simple answer: no, ND filters don't increase dynamic range.
In zone system, an ND filter just moves exposure of scene elements n stops lower. Everything that was in the lowest n zones captured without the filter, gets clipped off as black.
I can think of two scenarios where an ND filter might increase dynamic range, but I wouldn't use it for that:
Correct answer by Imre on July 13, 2021
It's just dark glass (or resin, of course); it reduces the amount of light entering the lens, and that's all. There may be a slight amount of nonlinearity in the colour response (causing a slight colour shift) but that is merely due to the absence of real-world, uniformly attenuative substances.
A graduated (or split) neutral density filter can be used to control contrast by selectively (by position) controlling which parts of the image are viewed through the filter, but a solid ND is just an attenuator.
Answered by user2719 on July 13, 2021
Your question references ND filters which I think most would consider to be a solid ND filter. Those are mostly used to decrease your shutter speed for long exposures or by allowing you to open up your aperture for a more shallow depth of field in bright light.
A graduated ND filter is typically used to balance the exposure. With a traditional ND filter the top part of the filter is darker (by the rated stops for the filter) and it gradually moves to transparent. You place the darker part over the brightest parts of the scene (a bright sky) in order to properly expose the foreground.
In the foreground you do not lose shadow detail because it's viewed through the transparent part of the filter. If anything you gain shadow detail as you're able to properly expose it without the bright sky causing the foreground to underexpose.
However, if you have shadow detail you need preserved in the bright area...those would most likely be lost anyway due to the bright source and just about your only choice would be to use an HDR technique. Some of the highlights would be lost in the bright area but I think if you're trying to balance the overall exposure this is a point of choice - what do you want to show in the image? Before filters or HDR you always had to choose - expose for foreground or expose for the sky/background.
There are also reverse grad ND filters which help with sunsets/sunrises - when the brightest part of the sky is along the horizon line. You are able to preserve highlight and shadow detail in the sky above the sun due to how the graduation is applied to this filter. It's darkest at the center, bottom is transparent...but from the middle dark area it gradually lightens toward the top.
Answered by Jarrod268 on July 13, 2021
Both your graphs are correct.
If you represent the intensity levels in a linear scale, then the left graph (“Linear mapping”) is the appropriate one. If you represent intensity levels in a log scale (i.e. in number of stops, or EVs/LVs...), then the right graph is appropriate.
BTW, the filter does not clip darks. The “ND filter” curve on the right graph can be extended to the left, to negative intensity levels (negative EV values are OK).
Answered by Edgar Bonet on July 13, 2021
You use the ND to get to your ideal settings.
If you digital sensor has max dynamic at 800 ISO but this would overexpose the scene you use an ND to compensate.
So in this case you could say you gain dynamic using an ND opposite to reducing it in camera.
Answered by Phill on July 13, 2021
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