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Moment Cinebloom Diffusion Review
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Moment CineBloom Filter Review & Sample Photos

  • Alik Griffin
  • March 12, 2025
  • 2 comments

This website contains affiliate links. We will earn a small commission on purchases made through these links. Some of the links used in these articles will direct you to Amazon. As an Amazon Associate, I earn from qualifying purchases.

The CineBloom Diffusion Filter from Moment helps you achieve a dreamy, vintage film-like effect in your footage. With various densities, these filters soften hard edges, smooth skin tones, and reduce the appearance of wrinkles. They also catch and bloom light, creating a more organic or classic feel to your digital photography.

The filter’s ring is made from aerospace-grade aluminum, designed to be thin enough to stack underneath other filters without affecting the field of view.

Key Take Away

If I had to summarize what this filter is about, I would say it’s more of a Mist filter, when light hits it, it blooms the whole image with a mist effect, and you’ll get less contrast as the blacks are lifted as the highlights bloom. It’s great for portraits and videography because the effect is consistent, whereas with the Black Mist filters, the effects are mostly localized around the light sources, and it can feel more obvious that there is a filter effect.

I don’t think CineBloom filters are a replacement to the Tiffen Black Pro-Mist filter because the effect is different. Same with the Tiffen Glimmerglass filters, the effect is different as they mostly reduce some of the digital harshness without adding much of a diffusion mist effect.

Check out this comparison between the best diffusion filters to see how the CineBloom stacks up and if it’s right for you.

Moment CineBloom Diffusion Filters – ShopMoment – Amazon – B&H – Adorama

Moment Cinebloom Diffusion Filter Review

In this review, I’m utilizing the Moment Cinebloom Diffusion filter at 10% in combination with the Nikon Z6 and 50mm f1.8 lens.

What makes these filters exceptional is the subtle glow they create, which gives a touch of classic aesthetics to our modern lenses. This effect reminds me of a more exaggerated “Leica Glow” that you get from older classic lenses before the advent of modern coatings; the Helios 44-2 lenses come to mind. Alternatively, you can even get a subtle glow with some of the modern classic lenses that use single coatings or no coatings, like the Voigtlander SC lenses, and even some of my Kipon lenses produce a nice glow in some situations. Now, with these filters, you can add extra character to any lens without compromising image quality.

Moment primarily markets these filters to videographers and cinematographers, but I find them particularly useful for street photography. They help to remove some of the digital crispness to create a film-like appearance, which is the look I’m going for.

But I would consider this more of a mist filter for a more glamour noir portrait effect.

I’ve included a sample image taken during the day that exemplifies the effect of the filter. The highlights have a halation that is very reminiscent of film stocks. When I apply my Aged presets on top of this, I achieve a look that is incredibly close to a film-like appearance.

Moment Cinebloom Film Vibe
ISO 100, f8, 1/400

Unedited Sample At Night

Moment CineBloom Sample NightTime
ISO 800, f2.8, 1/200

Unedited Samples – Day

Moment CineBloom Sample Daytime
ISO 400, f11, 1/500
Moment CineBloom Sample Daytime
ISO 800, f3.5, 1/160

Moment Diffusion Filter Build Quality

Moment Black Mist Filter

The Moment soft filters consist of white nanoparticles sandwiched between two layers of Japanese glass. The filter ring is crafted from aerospace-grade metal and the filter still feels superior to other cheaper brands. The metal material has a softer texture, while cheaper filters have a cold and hollow feel to them.

Moment Soft Mist Filter

We’ll see how these Moment filters hold up, and I have to say they do feel nice compared to the cheaper brands. They are very smooth when you screw them on or take them off, unlike the cheaper ones, which feel almost sandy or gritty and gross.

The additional red accent to the lens also looks really nice with Nikon mirrorless or some Leica cameras, which also use red in the design.

The Cinebloom Diffusion filters come in three different powers – 5% – 10% and 20%. I bought the 10% and that’s what you see here. Keep in mind, if you buy the 5% and think you’ll get less of an effect, you will, but the glass is still uncoated and you’ll still get a glare or a softening of contrast when in bright lighting.

Moment Cinebloom Diffusion Filter

– You can see here in this sample, a soft diffusion on the lights, but then in the very bright lights of the background, there is almost a glow. Also, around the bright areas, the contrast is a little softer, and the blacks feel a little lifted because of the way the light is scattered.

Moment Cinebloom Diffusion Filter Review | Bottom Line

There are several soft filter brands available in the market, each with a unique appearance. Some soft filters are multicoated or uncoated with black particles, while others are uncoated and use white particles. You may have heard of Tiffen Glimmerglass or just their Pro-Mist filters.

Out of all the soft filters, the Moment filters stand out as one of my favorites due to their uncoated, high-quality metal build.

But the use case is specific for me since the diffusion spreads throughout the whole image, you get lifted blacks and less contrast.

Another filter that I really appreciate is the Tiffen Black Pro-Mist at 1/4, which offers a more controlled look. I highly recommend both of these filters.

The build quality of the Moment filters is top-notch and on par with Tiffen filters. Additionally, the red ring design adds a cool look, and the bright color makes it easy to spot when the filter is attached to your lens.

Sample Images – 10% Power

These sample images are all shot on the Nikon Z6 with the Z 50mm f1.8 and colored with my Core Presets. For these night shots, I shot with the cloudy white balance, which gives me very orange and yellow photos under this lighting, and I also under-exposed by about 1 stop. I used the Nikon Standard Profile since it adds a nice blend to the colors compared to Adobe Color or Adobe Standard, which feels a little harsh at times. On top of that, I layered my presets and did very little editing other than that.

ISO 800, f3.2, 1/160
ISO 800, f2.8, 1/200
ISO 800, f2.8, 1/200
ISO 800, f3.2, 1/160
ISO 800, f3.2, 1/160
ISO 800, f2.8, 1/125
ISO 800, f3.5, 1/200
ISO 800, f2, 1/160
ISO 800, f3.2, 1/160
ISO 800, f2.0, 1/60
ISO 800, f2.8, 1/200
ISO 800, f2.2, 1/125
ISO 800, f2.5, 1/160
ISO 800, f3.5, 1/200
ISO 400, f5.0, 1/500
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Alik Griffin

A professional video editor, and photographer with a Bachelors in Film studies from UCSD. Based in Los Angeles, I have created commercials, trailers, and other video content for various clients and platforms since 2005. I also love to write about my passions and share my insights on my blog.

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2 comments
  1. Troy Phillips says:
    June 30, 2023 at 11:56 am

    You’re an excellent street photographer. I really like some of these street photos . Good style you have and it shows . Some of the photos are just the bomb. I had several I really liked with the Nikon 40mm f/2.0 Z and the Nikon 28 f.2.8 Z and the Pro Mist filter reviews! Killer job . Because of your review of the Nikon 40mm review I’m buying it . Not just your review, I’ve wanted the lens as soon as I saw its low element count specs before it came out . I really like how it renders but sure wish the build quality was better. There should be a revised version ii of this modern classic and build it to a classic quality. Even bump up its af speed to blazing fast and accurate. Wide and wide normal lenses are being used for action photography out on the streets . We “need” fast af actuation of these modern Normal to ultrawide lenses. The days of slow focus af wide angles are gone . Sony has the bad ass 12-24 that I want. It’s a phenomenal lens if used correctly. Get me one y’all and I’ll give ya some trick pics or videos. In your face all day shuff ! Peace y’all!

    Reply
    1. Alik Griffin says:
      July 1, 2023 at 12:51 pm

      Thanks Tony. I would be cool if Nikon gave us a few revised versions of these lenses for sure. Like some all-metal designs or something.
      I still want Nikon to make a rangefinder digital camera.

      Reply

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