MCUV - Magnetic Series
1054
£51.99 842 pcs sold
Magnetic MCUV + Lens Cap
100
£31.99 74 pcs sold
MCUV - Nano-X Series
EASTER SALE
MCUV - Nano-X Series
950
£16.99 683 pcs sold
MCUV - Nano-D Series
EASTER SALE
MCUV - Nano-D Series
864
£14.99 103 pcs sold
MCUV - Nano-K Series
EASTER SALE
MCUV - Nano-K Series
380
£8.99 50 pcs sold
MCUV - Nano-X Pro Series
240
£69.99 14 pcs sold
MCUV+CPL Filter - Nano K Series
EASTER SALE
MCUV+CPL Filter - Nano K Series
250
£21.99 59 pcs sold
MCUV Super Hard - Nano-X Series
560
£21.99 117 pcs sold
MCUV+CPL+ND4
34% OFF
MCUV+CPL+ND4
280
£28.99 592 pcs sold
MCUV+CPL
EASTER SALE
MCUV+CPL
300
£49.99 158 pcs sold

Protection & UV Control Filters

UV filters are used to block invisible ultraviolet light, to which most photographic sensors and film are at least slightly sensitive. The UV is typically recorded as if it were blue light, so this non-human UV sensitivity can result in an unwanted exaggeration of the bluish tint of atmospheric haze or, even more unnaturally, of subjects in open shade lit by the ultraviolet-rich sky. Normally, the glass or plastic of a camera lens is practically opaque to short-wavelength UV, but transparent to long-wavelength (near-visible) UV. A UV filter passes all or nearly all of the visible spectrum but blocks virtually all ultraviolet radiation. (Most spectral manipulation filters are named for the radiation they pass; green and infrared filters pass their named colors, but a UV filter blocks UV.) It can be left on the lens for nearly all shots: UV filters are often used mainly for lens protection in the same way as clear filters. A strong UV filter, such as a Haze-2A or UV17, cuts off some visible light in the violet part of the spectrum, and has a pale yellow color; these strong filters are more effective at cutting haze,and can reduce purple fringing in digital cameras. Strong UV filters are also sometimes used for warming color photos taken in shade with daylight-type film.

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