bmattock
Veteran
The problem with using lens hoods is that you don't usually know you have a problem with flare unless it is extremely obvious. Most of us who don't shoot directly into the sun (contre jour) don't get the kind of flare that jumps right out at you - so we assume we have no problem with flare. And without something to compare it to, we won't see it, either. So we insist that we have no problem with flare - or, our lenses don't flare, or we know how to shoot photos and not get flare and so on. We're all convinced that flare is a problem other people get - probably because their lens is inferior, or they just aren't a good photographer, etc.
Again - you'll never know you have a flare problem until you try a shot with a lens hood and without a lens hood on the same photos on the same day on the same roll of film. Once you do that, you see the difference it can make. Until then, nothing will convince you.
People can be so stubborn. "I don't SEE flare in my photos" meaning it must NOT be there. Well, it is. You don't see it because you don't see an identical photo shot WITHOUT flare. In many cases - perhaps even in most - it is there.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks
Again - you'll never know you have a flare problem until you try a shot with a lens hood and without a lens hood on the same photos on the same day on the same roll of film. Once you do that, you see the difference it can make. Until then, nothing will convince you.
People can be so stubborn. "I don't SEE flare in my photos" meaning it must NOT be there. Well, it is. You don't see it because you don't see an identical photo shot WITHOUT flare. In many cases - perhaps even in most - it is there.
Best Regards,
Bill Mattocks