How To Get the Glow Effect Without Losing Detail

Many who try to create a glow effect in their shots will end up with something closer to soft focus. Here's how one photographer gets a dreamy feel to his images, without sacrificing sharpness or important details.

There was a time where you would see soft focus everywhere. It was a fair few decades back now, but for many of us, we grew up seeing professional portraits of relatives on the wall where the image looked like the camera had cataracts. I grew up hating that aesthetic so strongly that I always ran as fast as I could in the opposite direction with my images. However, there is a "look" that isn't uncommon in modern photography and videography that has a dreamy feel to it. The highlights seem to bloom like a video game, but contrast and detail are retained. So, how is this done?

Well, there is more than one way, but the best way I know of happens to also be the way photographer and YouTuber, Vuhlandes, achieves it: a Pro-Mist Filter. The Tiffen Black Pro-Mist 1/4 Filter range is the most common and can be highly effective in creating that look. However, as you can see in even Tiffen's example images, it's far too easy to fall into the soft focus look. As Vuhlandes explains in his video — and he really has mastered the filter in my opinion — you're not looking to wash your image out, but rather achieve a subtler effect.

Do you use a Pro-Mist filter? Why or why not? Share your thoughts in the comments below.

Robert K Baggs's picture

Robert K Baggs is a professional portrait and commercial photographer, educator, and consultant from England. Robert has a First-Class degree in Philosophy and a Master's by Research. In 2015 Robert's work on plagiarism in photography was published as part of several universities' photography degree syllabuses.

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2 Comments

Good diffusion filters cannot be simulated in Photoshop with features like Gaussian Blur as they scatter some but not all light creating softness while maintaining sharpness. I also have the Tiffen Soft FX, it predecessor the Zeiss Softar and the newer Schneider Black True-Net for an Old Hollywood look. Diffusion filters are good for taming highlights, brining out detail in dark shadows in video and some other technical purposes but each has it’s own signature which also creates a mood and atmosphere. Vuhlandes talks about getting that “heavenly look” other diffusion filters create a warm intimacy, glamour, film noire or vintage. Cinematographers choose filters for mood as much as they do for technical reasons.