Mystery Filter!

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I dug out one of my old Minolta SLRs today. It had a filter on the lens, but I'm not sure what type of filter it is...or even if it just clear glass.

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What do you think?
 
I see, so if I'm not mistaken, that adds 'warmth' to shots? Would it be any good on a nifty fifty...for indoor/xmas shots?
 
not with digital. Unless you like yellow people.

They were only really useful with film where you couldn't alter the white balance and where stuck with whatever W/B the film was meant for, e.g. tungsten
 
As everyone has said, it's a skylight filter. It adds a little warmth to the shot by filtering out a little of the Blue light of daylight. It should not have too extreme an effect on Digital as they are not really used to alter film balance, and if you don't like the effect you could just dial in a bit more blue white balance to bring it back in. (if you have a custom WB mode you could get it accurate if you balance with the filter in place - it will have no real effect then).

Many people still use these as a lens protecting filter (in fact I might do so too).
 
What would be the best or most transparent (in a non picture altering way) filter to use to protect an expensive lens? A uv? skylight?
 
Don't use filters, use a lens hood :)

Which helps, but doesn't protect it entirely, especially with wideangle lenses. I feel much happier with filters on all my lenses.

What would be the best or most transparent (in a non picture altering way) filter to use to protect an expensive lens? A uv? skylight?

You can get completely neutral filters, ie just plain glass. I use B&W F-Pro filters (UV filters) for all my lenses.
 
my expensive 10-20

Which you have turned into a cheap 10-20 by covering it with a UV filter. The coating on the front element of expensive lenses is there to reduce glare and reflections and is what makes your lens so expensive. Covering it with a cheap piece of glass is completely defeating the point of buying good glass.
 
Which you have turned into a cheap 10-20 by covering it with a UV filter. The coating on the front element of expensive lenses is there to reduce glare and reflections and is what makes your lens so expensive. Covering it with a cheap piece of glass is completely defeating the point of buying good glass.

Who is to say he used a 'cheap piece of glass'? Decent UV filters have little or no effect on the IQ. I use B&W F-Pro filters for all my lenses (Except the 300mm f2.8 as the front element is too big, so no filter thread) and they have no noticable adverse effects.
 
I admit that better quality UV filters are a huge improvement on the cheaper ones but I personally do see an improvement without them. I grudge having to fit a CPL when the conditions call for it and generally do exposure blending in PS rather than use an ND-Grad. Each to their own I suppose.
 
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