![]() ![]() ![]() Tiffen are known for their glass filters for your lenses, and the selection available here is exhaustive, with everything from colour-correcting to photographic effects. You simply have to give the simulated polarising filter a try on any photos with a nice blue sky - it works very well indeed. These words aren't really good for describing the power of DFX, the video is better, but I recommend you download the free trial and give it a go yourself. Take a look at the free tutorials available on the Tiffen site too, and play with the different parts of the software. I tend to fire up Lightroom, import the photos, do a little straightening and lens correction, then edit the images in dfx v4. I normally cycle through the film stocks, then add a little contrast and effects, then I round-trip back to Lightroom to key-word, geotag and export, but you'll come up with your own workflow.
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