![]() ![]() However, the clip-in mechanism is surprisingly difficult to detach again, requiring more squeeze than is comfortable. ![]() It’s also very easy to rotate, and it clips into the holder much more easily than trying to screw a conventional polarizer onto your lens. This system means the polarizer is large at 105mm in diameter, allowing it to cover numerous different lens diameters. The polarizer then clips to the front of the holder, leaving space for additional square filters to slide in behind. This is based around the LEE100 holder that attaches to your lens via a suitably sized adapter ring. Lee’s Polariser works in conjunction with the LEE100 100mm filter system. See our full Marumi DHG Super Circular PL review (opens in new tab) With filter thread diameters available in all common sizes from 37mm through to 95mm (and even an elusive 105mm option, if you can find it), there’s a DHG Super polarizer for almost any lens, and most are very well priced, in the UK at least. It screws very smoothly into your lens’ filter thread, and the polarizer’s front element rotation is also slick. The latter is mainly thanks to a slim frame design that’s a whisker under 5mm thick. Otherwise, optical performance is excellent, with no drop in image sharpness, and no sign of color casts or vignetting. However, DHG Super polarizers don’t incorporate high light transmission glass, as found in Marumi’s EXUS polarizers, which may explain why our sample filter restricted light by half-a-stop more than the best filters on test. The DHG Super range gets a water and oil-repellent coating, which works well, easily beading away droplets and resisting fingerprints, albeit not quite as well as the Lee Polariser. Marumi offers a slightly confusing four distinct ranges of circular polarizers, each with different glass/coating combinations. ![]()
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