TomDart opened this issue on May 02, 2004 ยท 7 posts
TomDart posted Sun, 02 May 2004 at 3:28 PM
AntoniaTiger posted Sun, 02 May 2004 at 5:27 PM
The basic yellow filter for monochrome work cuts out blue light. What you could do is split the image into an RGB set, darken the blue image, and recombine. Then convert to greyscale. For an unfiltered B+W image I reckon you should brighten the blue image, since B+W films are more sensitive to blue light. The other filters used will chop out more and more. One of the problems with digital is that you throw away a lot of spectral information. You keep the detail our eyes can see, but throw away some of what filters work on. Oh, and you know that green plants reflect a lot of red light?
AntoniaTiger posted Sun, 02 May 2004 at 5:40 PM
Further fiddling suggests you needed to shoot differently. There maybe isn't enough brightness difference.
Misha883 posted Sun, 02 May 2004 at 8:21 PM
Attached Link: http://www.renderosity.com/messages.ez?ForumID=12379&Form.ShowMessage=1751410
There actually is some good information, (and free filters), hiding in this thread.Misha883 posted Sun, 02 May 2004 at 8:41 PM
TomDart posted Mon, 03 May 2004 at 9:05 PM
My vision might be different but the replies do help me a bunch. I seem to be leaning more toward photography than creating from scratch digital art..that is for now. I offer thanks to AntoniaTiger and Misha...straight thought is very helpful, as are links in the thread link. If you havd other ideas, let me know. Right now, I simply have to learn more of filters, lighting contidions and how to adapt to that... My long gone dad had a little darkroom made in a corner of the basement. He did mostly Tri-X back then. I realize now I am on a similar path as his into growing in this imaging. God Bless. TomDart.
Misha883 posted Mon, 03 May 2004 at 10:06 PM
Ah! The smell of Dektol in the morning!