hfillmore Offline Upload & Sell: On
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When you need it, nothing else even comes close. And when you need it the most, is when things are kind of grey, colorless, and blah. It works like this: A regular polarizer will remove glare, allowing for more saturated colors. The Gold/Blue, will also remove the glare, but in addition to removing glare, will also add gold or blue to the areas with glare.
Like regular polarizers, the effect is greatest at ninety degrees to the light source. But as others have said, it's always a surprise. Depending on the angles involved, sometimes you get gold in the sky, and blue in the water, or conversely, or sometimes splotches of gold, blue, and magenta in the same shot. I think that after the basic polarizer, this is my next most loved filter. I might even prefer it over ND grads if I had to choose, since you can usually duplicate the effect of ND grads by blending layers in PS. But like regular polarizers, the effects of the gold/blue polarizer can not be duplicated in PS.
Here's a couple of shots I posted on another forum. The day was almost totally grey, here's the result, adjusted to add gold.
Harvey
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