TexasBadger said:+1 on B+W
jdramirez said:I was cheap, I picked up a hoya. it is ok...I don't do landscapes and when I do portraiture i don't want the skin color altered at all.
bglanzbe said:I mainly photograph portraits and landscapes. Welcome thoughts! Thanks!
I actually have some Lee filters that are compatible with my Cokin holder, in my mind the two systems are interchangeable for the most part, and Singh Ray makes good ones too.For landscapes you may want to have a look at ND (neutral density) filters; homogeneous to allow use of very long shutter speeds or graduated to balance between light skies and darker grounds. I use the Lee filter system, which is not cheap but very good. You could have a look here: http://www.leefilters.com/index.php/camera/ndgrads to see what it can do for your landscapes.
jhanken said:Another factor in favor of Cokin for me is that I have lenses with 77mm, 67mm, 62mm, 58mm, and even 52mm with the new EOS M. With a Cokin P system, you can buy the filters once and get adapter rings for your lenses. They are a bit bigger than the screw in ones, but holy cow, you could go bankrupt buying good quality circular polarizers for your whole lens collection. With Cokin P, if you get a new lens with an odd filter ring size, your total cost to adapt your filters to it is a $20 ring.
One thing to consider is that the P series doesn't work with the widest angle lenses. I don't have a 16-35mm or 17-40mm, and I think they work down to about the widest on those lenses, but I am not sure about that.
Cali_PH said:jhanken said:Another factor in favor of Cokin for me is that I have lenses with 77mm, 67mm, 62mm, 58mm, and even 52mm with the new EOS M. With a Cokin P system, you can buy the filters once and get adapter rings for your lenses. They are a bit bigger than the screw in ones, but holy cow, you could go bankrupt buying good quality circular polarizers for your whole lens collection. With Cokin P, if you get a new lens with an odd filter ring size, your total cost to adapt your filters to it is a $20 ring.
One thing to consider is that the P series doesn't work with the widest angle lenses. I don't have a 16-35mm or 17-40mm, and I think they work down to about the widest on those lenses, but I am not sure about that.
I was going to mention the Lee system, but I see you edited your response as I was finding some linksI switched from the Cokin to the Lee system because it has wide angle adapter rings (49 through 82mm). I use them with my 17-40L and can stack 2 filters fine.