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Haida 67mm NanoPro MC Clear-Night Filter

BH #HANPCN67 • MFR #HD3704-67
Haida 67mm NanoPro MC Clear-Night Filter
Key Features
  • Reduces Light Pollution in Night Sky
  • Absorbs Yellow Sodium-Vapor Light
  • 1.25x Filter Factor, +0.3 Stop
  • Optical Glass Construction
The 67mm NanoPro MC Clear-Night Filter from Haida is designed to reduce the appearance of light pollution in images or video that include the night sky, and to minimize illumination from artificial light sources. This effect can be obtained when the filter is used on a film camera system with daylight film installed, or on a digital camera system with the daylight white balance setting selected.
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Haida NanoPro Clear-Night Overview

The 67mm NanoPro MC Clear-Night Filter from Haida is designed to reduce the appearance of light pollution in images or video that include the night sky, and to minimize illumination from artificial light sources. This effect can be obtained when the filter is used on a film camera system with daylight film installed, or on a digital camera system with the daylight white balance setting selected.

Light pollution occurs in areas of the night sky that are above or near concentrated and intense sources of artificial light, such as cities. These sources can include streetlamps, exterior and interior lamps for commercial or residential buildings, sports and entertainment venue lighting, and brightly lit advertisements such as billboards. Together, they can result in a type of light pollution known as skyglow, where individual stars, the Milky Way, and other astronomical features in the night sky are obscured. Additionally, artificial lights clustered together can become difficult to discern individually. Light pollution from these "cluttered" sources can become a source of distraction within an image, and can resemble overexposed areas of glare.

The Haida 67mm NanoPro MC Clear-Night Filter can improve the results of nighttime images by absorbing the yellow light from sodium-vapor lamps, a common light source within urban areas. By preventing the dominant wavelengths of light associated with the color of those lamps from being recorded, the filter enhances visibility of astronomical objects. It ensures that, in the places where they do appear, artificial light sources are more clearly defined, with less glare and improved contrast.

This filter is constructed from optical glass for clarity and color fidelity. To prevent internal ghosting and reflections, each glass surface includes 10 layers of anti-reflection coatings, which also offer greater protection to the filter substrate and help keep it clean for a longer period of time. The Nano coating associated with the 67mm MC Clear-Night Filter provides an additional layer that results in an improved beading effect when the surface comes in contact with water or oil, allowing for more efficient cleaning.

An aluminum alloy ring ensures durability while allowing the 67mm NanoPro MC Clear-Night Filter to remain lightweight. A plastic case is included for storage and transport.

  • Reduces the appearance of light pollution in images or video that include the night sky, and minimizes illumination from artificial light sources
  • For cameras with daylight film installed, or digital camera systems with the daylight white balance setting selected
  • Absorbs the yellow light from sodium-vapor lamps, a common light source within urban areas
  • Enhances the visibility of astronomical objects
  • Increases definition and contrast of artificial light sources while minimizing glare
  • 1.25x filter factor reduces exposure by 0.3 stops
  • Constructed from optical glass for clarity
  • Aluminum alloy filter ring for durability and light weight
  • Plastic filter case for storage and transport

Haida NanoPro Clear-Night Specs

Filter Type
Light Pollution
Filter Factor
1.25x (0.3-Stop)
Circular Size
67 mm Filter Thread
Front Accessory Thread / Bayonet
Unthreaded
Coatings
Multi-Coating
Filter Material
Glass
Packaging Info
Package Weight
0.13 lb
Box Dimensions (LxWxH)
3.7 x 3.6 x 0.75"

Haida NanoPro Clear-Night Reviews

Does it's job.

By Mark
Rated 4 out of 5
Date: 2019-07-13

I live in the North East and have to drive at least an hour or more to find good conditions for shooting milkyway. Even then we still seem to get alot of yellow cast and can ruin a good shot, I have used this filter and it defiantly seems to help, it will bring out more white in the lower sky which you can adjust in post process. It also seems to give a nice purple cast to the colors and sky.

Works as Advertised

By John
Rated 5 out of 5
Date: 2019-01-28

Used it on a normal nighttime city shoot. Worked great. No color cast. Quality materials. Recommended.

Love the look with the his filter

By Kendall
Rated 5 out of 5
Date: 2019-05-22

After going through the reviews and comparisons, I decided to go with the Haida Clear Night filter. I bought the 67mm for use with my Sony 24mm f1.4 GM. First test was at Ft. Griffin which is a very dark site but you still get some light pollution on the horizon. What made me a believer in this filter was when I a couple photos, both with and without filter, as I was setting up. A quick view in the evf showed a dramatic difference between the two shots. As some have said, you do get more blue cast to the night sky, but I really like that look. And I can warm up whichever elements I want should I want to do that. All told a really nice LP filter. I liked it so much I purchased a 77mm version for other lenses.

It works

By Roy
Rated 4 out of 5
Date: 2019-04-08

I tried both the ICE and Haida side-by-side. I could find no difference in optical quality, other than it was easier to MAKE the ICE flare.  This is as expected since the ICE is not coated.  Neither had any problems with flair during sky shooting, even with the inclusion of street lights. I suspect that the ICE will be harder to clean as well, again due to the lack of coatings. I did manage to get a finger smudge on the ICE after 20 filter changes during the testing. but I had no trouble cleaning it off. With the exception of a single test scenario, they both eliminated LP equally well. In that single test, it looked like the Haida had a very slight advantage. I saw no difference in the other scenes. The Haida adds a much more pronounced blue cast to the image. This is what pushed me into keeping the ICE. It is much easier to return the empty space to black with the ICE in PP.  That and it costs half as much. I really wanted to like the Haida better. Multi-coated, Nano, etc. but I just couldnt see any difference. (Im a pixel-peeper) This is an excellent resource here on B&H  9 Light Pollution Filters Tested: Do They Really Work?  I saw a much more pronounced blue cast with the Haida than they show in their results. Not sure why. The ICE does add a slight blue tint, as they say in the review. You can see in their test that the Haida handles flair/reflection much better than the ICE. Better than all the others tested. Of course their test was very extreme. I saw no difference even when shooting into a flashlight at the edge of the frame. I saw about 1/2 stop light loss for both the ICE and Haida. If you live in a light polluted area, this filter will definitely help.

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