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The One Filter You Need For Summer Photography

Aug 05, 2015
Promaster HGX Filter

The ProMaster HGX UV filter is designed specifically for digital lenses, so it minimizes internal reflections created by CCD and CMOS sensors. This filter also includes the exclusive Repellamax® element resistant coating, shielding your lens from moisture, fingerprints, dust, dirt, and other environmental hazards, ensuring your images are tack sharp. If you have to pick only one filter choose this one, available in a variety of sizes for your particular lens


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By Brogan Quick 27 Jul, 2023
Adapted from ProMaster website. CLICK HERE for complete article.
By Alyce Bender 21 Oct, 2021
Tips for Photographing Fall Foliage Featuring Alyce Bender  Fall provides us the opportunity to capture stunning landscapes with bold colors, but only for a short period of time. We have asked Tamron Pro Ambassador Alyce Bender to share some of her top tips for photographing fall foliage. To see more of Alyce Bender's work, visit her website: https://www.abenderphotography.com/ .
18 Aug, 2021
Alyce Bender is known for her passion for biodiversity, vulnerable species, and environmental awareness, all documented through her carefully captured images. But though you’ll find many traditional nature and wildlife photos in her portfolio, Alyce also enjoys creating abstract and impressionistic imagery that taps into a different side of her brain.“Instead of simply taking a photo of a crane in flight, for example, I’ll try to create the visual personification of that,” she says. “In other words, I want you to feel that emotion you feel when you see the crane in flight, or two rivers coming together. I want you to puzzle over the image a bit and let your brain create a story to accompany it.”To take the photos for these particular collections, Alyce uses the Tamron 150-600mm VC G2 telephoto zoom. “This lens gives me the reach I need to focus in on areas of detail, texture, and movement, for both my traditional nature and wildlife photos and for my fine-art work,” she says. “Its versatility is a huge draw for me. I’ll often get bored while sitting around waiting for wildlife to show up to photograph. It’s amazing that I don’t even have to switch lenses to switch gears and create my more abstract work.”Alyce tries to keep her fine-art images as simple and minimalist as possible, without using filters or Photoshop to create the movement and blur in her photos. “It’s all done in-camera,” she says. “People already know what a bison, bear, or coastline filled with reeds looks like, so I want to present my subjects in a different way. It makes the viewer pause and think a little more about the image.”CLICK HERE to Read on for Alyce’s explainer on the thought process behind each piece created here with the 150-600mm G2 lens.
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