📸 See the world clearly with Tiffen!
Tiffen Lens Cleaning Tissue Paper comes in a convenient pack of 50 ultra-thin, lint-free sheets designed to keep your lenses clean and clear without scratching. Perfect for photographers and anyone who values pristine optics.
J**Y
Does a great job!
Good wipes for lenses but be sure not to press too hard and blow any dust off the glass first.
J**.
lens tissue
this is a very good lens tissue. I use it on my camera lens when I'm on vacation and it works quite well and does not streak or leave any dust or fibers
D**H
Great value and actual lens-cleaning tissues, not wet wipes
These will actually work on camera lenses and won't leave a residue. And they're not extortionately-priced. That's two wins!
E**C
They work!
I love these little things. When I first got them I was a little skeptical because they seemed a little rough. But after using them, all my worries disappeared. I use them at work for cleaning glass and plastic filters on medical equipment. Using them dry will work somewhat but it may not remove everything. When I use them with lens cleaner solution, they work wonderfully. Always spotless. I have never ever had them scratch but you should always be careful of how hard you press. I trust them enough to clean very expensive equipment. And they never leave any fibers behind. They are a little on the small side as you can see from the photos. If you are cleaning something a little larger, you will have to use multiple sheets.One problem I do have is with how they are packaged. They are all stacked inside a little fold of paper. Whenever I open the paper to take one out, the top few sheets get carried up with it and fly out. If you upset the delicate balance in which they are stacked, you will have a difficult time putting them back together neatly. It's not hard, just time consuming. They do come in an envelope which is extremely useful. They would fly everywhere if not for that envelope. I wish they were attached together and you could just rip off what you need. But this is getting very nitpicky. As long as they clean well (which they do) I will keep buying them.
R**L
Hands down the best.
I trust these to clean my lens more than anything else or any other brand. They are dry and don’t leave any streaks behind. I’ve never had an issue with scratches, so I’ll keep using these since I trust them. I can even use them multiple times and they don’t break/tear. They’re soft, but hair doesn’t stick to them. Worth every penny!
E**E
the light passing through the scratch is affected like a prism would bend it
This paper is identical to the old Kodak lens tissue, the Gold Standard. As an old assistant cameraman from NYC, learned a whole lot of ways to clean $30,000 lenses: NEVER use anything but lens tissue, NEVER flat, NEVER first. Blow the surface off first, then carefully, circularly brush with a lipstick brush that has never been touched, or roll a piece of lens tissue from the end (like a joint, not touching the center section) and pull it apart in to two halves. The torn edge is the softest, non-scratching "brush", used wet and dry.The enemy of a lens is the scratch. Dust on a lens is of no consequence to the quality of the image until it is thickly filthy. Hopefully, it will "puff" off with a rubber blower. A scratch degrades the image: the light passing through the scratch is affected like a prism would bend it, arriving at the focal plane out of place. So, DON'T CLEAN A LENS UNLESS IT'S GOT A FINGERPRINT ON IT (corrodes the coatings as well as degrades the image) or other serious caca. NEVER 'scrub' the lens, lightly make perfectly circular swipes with a moistened (lens cleaning fluid only) - NEVER DRY and NEVER FLAT. If you happen to scratch the surface, a circular scratch is far less damaging to the image. Wad the tissue, soak it and "wash" the lens several times until the surface problem is gone. When it drys, you'll see 'stains', like an oil slick on water. Repeat to minimize these. NEVER have your finger pressing on a flat piece of tissue - wet or dry - (a sure way to make a scratch if a tiny piece of grit is present) until the very last step in cleaning.You've removed all the surface contamination, so NOW you can use two or three layers dry (slightly damp is better) and flat (wadded is safer) to lightly, circularly, remove the last of the 'stains'. So, BLOW, BRUSH, WASH, DRY. Miss any of these first three steps and you risk leaving grit on the surface - a scratch waiting for you to create it.I usually used around 10 -12 sheets of tissue for each cleaning - NEVER use the same piece of tissue twice, and if suspect you touched the surface of the tissue with anything - finger, table surface ,etc. - throw it away, it's contaminated.Note: Can't IMAGINE using even a pristine, always-kept-in-a- sealed-container microfiber cloth more that ONCE. You're just kidding yourself and micro scratching your lens...
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
2 months ago