Originally Posted by
Mike Buckley
For the record...
I wasn't regurgitating anything about the use of circular polarizers. I was explaining the results I regularly obtain in situations such as this one, so I'm not surprised that others who are far more accomplished than me have written about obtaining similar results.
I have no issue with the assertion that some of the benefits of using a polarizer filter can be obtained during post-processing and with relatively little time or skill required to do so. That, however, is very different than saying that the only thing that will happen when using a polarizer when photographing a scene such as this is to reduce the amount of light entering the lens. It's just plain wrong to write that.
To write that people are shooting at the wrong time of day when making landscapes is insensitive at best. When I was hiking the Lofoten mountains and came upon a scene I wanted to photograph -- the one and only time in my life that I would probably see that scene -- there is no wrong time of day. That was the best time of day because it was the only time of day I would capture the scene. We need to be more sensitive to the varying needs of photographers rather than to declare that there are right and wrong times of the day to make photos.
I have nothing to prove, so I also have nothing to add to the discussion. I, like lots of informed photographers, am going to keep using my circular polarizers, as I have one for every lens in my bag.