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thanks i think i'll go for the polarising filter, also how will i know if it will fit my lens? lol and how do you actually put it on the camera?
No they won't. Just avoid cheap ebay garbage and stick with name brand stuff like Hoya, Tiffen, B+W, or store brands like Promaster or Quantaray and you'll be fine. You don't even need fancy multi-coated ones if you're trying to save some money. I have tons of cheap filters and have seen exactly ZERO loss in image quality aside from some minor ghosting issues once in awhile. No big deal. I remove the filter to get rid of the ghost and then put it back on.For landscape I would use a polarising filter to get the blue sky, maybe a graduated ND filter.
A lot of people recommend putting a UV on and leaving it on, but if you don't get a very high quality one ($150 and up) then you will be putting an inferior piece of glass infront of your expensive lens and your pictures will suffer from it.
Hoya makes good stuff, but I personally think the super duper fancy schmanchy ultra doltra multi-coated pro super filters are overkill. Just get a regular multi-coated one, or heck even a single or non-coated. Chances are you'll eventually upgrade to something other than the 18-55 kit lens which will use larger filters, so I wouldn't spend too much on 52mm filters myself. I have a full set of 52's and I'm glad I didn't spend too much on them, because I have another full set of 67's, and am eventually going to need a full set of 77's too. :roll: I'm glad I never spent too much on my 52's, and despite not being the super duper fancy ones they still work fine.nevermind i've found out it is a 52mm
just wondering if anyone has any views on this filter?
http://www.amazon.co.uk/exec/obidos/ASIN/B000KL7JF8/ref=ord_cart_shr?_encoding=UTF8&m=A1PNZZN4FZFCTR