What do you clean your lens with?

What do you clean your lens with?

Author
Discussion

.Mark

Original Poster:

11,104 posts

283 months

Monday 12th January 2004
quotequote all
Question is in the title really.
At the weekend I bought a polarising filter so am just off to the beach to practise, but after last weeks attempts the lens is dirty, I've given it a clean with a soft duster but suspect thats not the done thing.

Now I have 2 lenses to keep clean I suppose I ought to do it properly!

Right see you when I get back

Mad Dave

7,158 posts

270 months

Monday 12th January 2004
quotequote all
I use a lens cloth from the opticians! I think it cost about £1 and its really good, and anti static too.

ehasler

8,567 posts

290 months

Monday 12th January 2004
quotequote all
Mad Dave said:
I use a lens cloth from the opticians! I think it cost about £1 and its really good, and anti static too.

Jessops do a lens cleaning kit, which contains a small squeezy airbrush thing, cloths and lens cleaning liquid. Normally I just use the brush, however I've also got a lens cleaning pen thing (which Jessops do as well), which someone I know recommended.

AJ ;-)

467 posts

253 months

Monday 12th January 2004
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I use individual disposable lens wipes, also handy to carry for binoculars and sunglasses.

simpo two

87,066 posts

272 months

Monday 12th January 2004
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Call me a philistine but I use a tissue and a hot breath!

leszekg

263 posts

274 months

Monday 12th January 2004
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Firstly, I avoid cleaning the lens as far as possible by keeping a UV filter permanently attached to the lens to protect it. The UV filter only occasionally comes off if I want to put a different filter on. That way if the filter surface ever gets damaged, marked or filthy beyond cleaning (that's happened once) then it's a simple matter of replacing the filter.

When I do need to clean a lens or filter I sometimes lightly use a soft photographic cloth. The one I use is a bit like a very fine shammy cloth and works better than most I've tried in the past. I use this sparingly as over-rubbing of lenses can eventually damage the surface. It only takes a small piece of grit in a cloth to do this. For this reason I swear by a product called OptiClean which cleans without any rubbing. I've been using it for years. You simply apply a film of liquid to the lens with a soft brush. The film is left to harden and then peeled off leaving the lens clean. It's quite expensive (RRP about £15) but you can get it for about half the price at 7dayshop.

srider

709 posts

289 months

Monday 12th January 2004
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One of the best things is a LensPen, available in Jessops

Microfibre cloths are also good. Avoid the cheap kits, they're usually not very good.

getcarter

29,630 posts

286 months

Monday 12th January 2004
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I too never clean the lens... as it comes out of the box a UV filter goes on and never comes off. I clean that with wire wool and WD40 (I also lie a lot).

Actually, as mentioned above, I also use eyeglass cleaning cloths from optitians to clean the filter - buy 10 at a time every few years.

ehasler

8,567 posts

290 months

Monday 12th January 2004
quotequote all
getcarter said:
I too never clean the lens... as it comes out of the box a UV filter goes on and never comes off. I clean that with wire wool and WD40 (I also lie a lot).

Yep - same here. UV filter purchased along with every lens I buy. Much cheaper to replace a filter than a lens!

nighthawkEP3

1,757 posts

251 months

Monday 12th January 2004
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Lenspen from Jessops and also a quick wipe over using a lens cloth made by opticron.

the lens pen can leave a have on the surface during cold weather cleaning,but the soft microfibre cloth soon sorts that.

all my lenses are fitted with UV filters.

DustyC

12,820 posts

261 months

Monday 12th January 2004
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ehasler said:

Mad Dave said:
I use a lens cloth from the opticians! I think it cost about £1 and its really good, and anti static too.


Jessops do a lens cleaning kit, which contains a small squeezy airbrush thing, cloths and lens cleaning liquid. Normally I just use the brush, however I've also got a lens cleaning pen thing (which Jessops do as well), which someone I know recommended.


I bought the same kit (But also bought a very good cloth from a different shop.
I found the bristles came out of my brush easily when I was cleaning inside the camera body. Thought I had got them all out till I developed the film.
(Had to clean body out. Was in an Australian desert, the dust was so fine it went into every little gap).

I also us UV filters. To protect lenses always.

simpo two

87,066 posts

272 months

Monday 12th January 2004
quotequote all
simpo two said:
Call me a philistine but I use a tissue and a hot breath!

I'd just like to add that the above treatment is carried out on the *UV filter*, not the lens!