Lens hoods Explained

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In this photography tutorial I’m going to explain everything you need to know about Lens hoods.

The questions I get asked are; What are lens hoods for? What do they do? Do I need one? When do I use one? What lens hood do I get for my lens? Etc. So hopefully I can answer all these questions for you all now. Let’s get started.

The main reason you use a lens hood is to stop stray light coming into your lens which can create lens flare. This normally happens when shooting into the sun or when you have a strong light source in front of the lens. A lens hood will create a stronger contrast of colours and tones in your images and to stop lens flare.

So when should you use a lens hood?
You should have a lens hood on all the time even inside or at night as you will get stray light going over the front of your lens which will reduce the contrast of your image. Another tip is always keep your lens clean as this will increase contrast and avoid lens flare too.

Exceptions to this rule:
When you actually want to create lens flare.

When you are using the pop-up flash on your camera as the light from the flash will be blocked by the lens hood and create a shadow in the bottom of your picture.

Now let’s talk about what types of lens hoods you can get. It breaks down into two main types really. A petal type lens hood and a cylindrical one meaning it takes on the shape of a cylinder.

The petal types of hoods are used on your standard zoom lenses, the ones that go to wider angles. This is because if you didn’t have these bits cut out and you had a cylinder hood you would actually see the lens hood in the image at wide angles. What you would see is black corners in your picture, which isn’t a good look!

To put this to the test do this – zoom your lens out to its widest angle look through the viewfinder and move your hand forward adjacent to the lens and you’ll see the hand appear in the corners. That’s why these bits are cut out, so you don’t see the lens hood at wide angles.

Then you have cylinder lens hoods and they are made for your fixed focal range lenses or prime lenses. They are shaped like this because the lenses don’t zoom out, these lenses are fixed to a particular focal length so the hoods can be made to go to the exact point where it won’t be seen in the image.

Another thing people ask is What lens hood do I get for my lens? Is it a one size fits all scenario. The simple answer to that is no, one size doesn’t fit all. You have to get the lens hood for your particular lens. For instance, I have the canon 24-105 zoom and the 16-35 zoom and they both need different lens hoods. The reason for this is the circumference of the front lenses are different, one is 77mm and the other is 82mm and the zoom range is different meaning the cut-out bits needs to be different. The wider the angle of view the further back the cut outs need to be.

This doesn’t mean that you need to get the branded lens hood for your lens. For instance the Canon lens hood for the canon lens. You can get all makes of lenses hoods for your lens online and they will be much cheaper, it’s only a bit of plastic after all. Just make sure it has been made for a particular type of lens. Type in lens hood for canon 24-105 lens and go from there. There will be loads of different brands doing the same lens hood.

I hope it’s helped you out and informed you as to what a lens hood does.

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49 Comments
  1. Akinola Olalekan says

    Lovely explained Thanks. Which hood len can I get for my 50mm prime len?

  2. Joe Hachach says

    Many thanks for your explanation. I have a question that would be very much appreciated if you can help me with.
    I have a good deal to get a second hand LENS NIKON 14-24mm F2.8 with a good price.
    The only problem is that 1 part of the sided tulip lens hood is broken. (Small part in an L shape).
    However, the glass itself is functional 100%. My concern is just related to this brake part that could affect a glare on the image.
    If no, i think it is a good deal

    Many thanks
    Joe

  3. Richard Roberts says

    I've just purchased a non petal type lens hood for my Canon 75-300. Am I now going to see hood in the corners of my image while at its widest focal length? I'm not worried about the money as I've got two for under £7, but I'm wondering if I'm now going to need to purchase another hood? hopefully 75mm isn't wide enough to see the hood.

  4. Cristian Calhoun says

    Prefect, thank you! 🙂 (Y)

  5. Steve Barlow says

    I understand your explanation, but still have a quandry. I have a Finepix HS30 EXR bridge camera and broke the lens hood. I now find I could get an exact replacement petal hood or a 3 in 1 cylinder hood like this https://www.photo24.co.uk/3-in-1-lens-hood-for-fujifilm-finepix-hs30exr Which should I get?

  6. Irfan Azmil says

    GREAT JOB! I LOVE YOUR EXPLANATION!

  7. Overwatch Mercy says

    Thank you

  8. Gábor Lipcsei says

    Great video but I still have 2 questions: are lens hoods getting attached to the filter thread of the lens? How do you use them with CPL filters? I mean I guess it is not comfortable to rotate the filter if it is inside the hood. Or if the hood is attached to the filter it would rotate with it.

  9. noplastik says

    It does not matter whether the lens is prime or zoom.
    For example, for the 70-200 zoom, the lens hood has to be designed for 70mm. For 200mm it will of course have less efficiency. For a monofocal 200mm, a more efficient lens hood can be designed.

  10. Always Leo says

    Is he Australian ?

  11. Richard Graham says

    sometimes lens flare adds to the photo.

  12. Blogger 1 says

    Table Top , Lens , Cameras Are Super Clean And Well Presentation Thank You

  13. Mahasin Mondal says

    👌👌👌

  14. Fadzil Ashari says

    Thanks again. It helped me a lot.

  15. Yash Harish says

    Can I use lens hood with uv lens protector.

  16. Nandan Naxsh says

    Do I have to use a lens hood for every lens I own. 🤔

  17. Agnes Larcena says

    Very helpful! I like that you're not talking fast in the video. Good for learning. Thank you. Im subscribing

  18. Sunil Jocelyn says

    Great explain mate.

  19. Ayu Indriati says

    so complete explanations 😭🙏🏻🙏🏻 GOOD JOB! Thank you & have a good day 🤗🤗

  20. SanDeep Sunarbabu says

    can you tell me which camera is best in nikon D5300 and canon 700D

  21. WILL revellet says

    Like .

  22. aliens from other galaxies says

    U will get vignette if u use lens hood,lol, this is my experience

  23. Elaine Williams says

    Very helpful. Thank you

  24. Auto Werkz says

    just purchased a sigma 16mm 1.4 that comes with a petal hood based on my interpretation of this video,shouldnt it have a cylindrical hood?

  25. TheEleutheromaniac says

    Should you still use a lens hood even if you are using an ND lens?

  26. electrabot says

    Love these videos it sooo helpful! ❤️

  27. TexCyn RV Life says

    Thank you. Liked & subbed. 👍

  28. Doug Jones says

    So simple, yet so helpful. I have wondered about lens hoods for years, but never took the time to learn about them because I thought the explanation would be too long and involved. Apparently, it’s not. I don’t have one, I need one, and in less than 10 minutes I know why. Fantastic.

  29. Inmune says

    Excellent video

  30. Kevin says

    Tnx.

  31. Pa Ct says

    Great video

  32. Florian Land says

    I actually never understood the difference… Finally I know!! Thanks a lot for the great explanation.

  33. Jerohn Ufo says

    A small doubt that I have a55-250mm kit lens which type should we use

  34. Jerohn Ufo says

    Thank you for clearing my mistakes

  35. Linda Dee says

    From personal experience, and probably everyone's experience, when shooting directly into the sun or some other intense light source at a wide aperature, flare is never prevented by only using a lens hood. In my early photography days, I usually used a hood, but it quickly became an inconvenience (except for the collapsible rubber hoods and the "built-in" hoods), so I learned to use my "lens holding" hand to block strong light sources from obliquely entering the lens. In mostly all cases, this method works very well, so I haven't used a lens hood in about 35 years now, but to each his own.

  36. Azenturi says

    The part that annoys me the most is when you have an old lens, but want a longer, more effective hood for it without going overboard.

    The HB-7 hood for Nikon's 80-200 2.8D push-pull is really short, the one for the two-ring version fits, but the petals don't line up, the hood for the 70-200 VR needs an adapter, and the one for the 80-400 fits (cylindrical hood like the HB-7), but is WAY too big to be practical and has vignetting at 80 mm.

  37. thanks for the tip you answer my question

  38. Avanti Media Productions says

    “Computah!!”

  39. Mulisa Museri says

    Thank you for this, so helpful:)

  40. sona chowdhury says

    i need to know … what should i do when in a low light place i use high shutter speed …. FOR EXAMPLE Water DROPS for the low light i also use high iso ….but the problem is when i take picture there is so much noise in it……. what should i do then

  41. ChillVibes _ says

    wow great lesson. you speak really clear. thank you

  42. Henry Jacobs says

    I really like your shirt. Send me one please 🙂

  43. stephen renwick says

    Steve
    well done, very clearly explained

  44. LAZY DOG says

    Good video but your first photo examples were trickery. The difference was not sun flare, it was clearly different angle of composition.

  45. Beerboy Piyush says

    Thank you 🙏🏻

  46. Hielo says

    Lovely tutorial! Thank you very much!!!

  47. Chris G says

    Nice one

  48. Dattaprasad Naik says

    Thnxx fr the info…😇😇😇👍👍👍📷

  49. Abou Ziad says

    a very big thanks for you nice..!

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