B/W film use - green yellow filter or just the yellow filter?

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rayonline_nz

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Any views on this? I started reading more and they say the yellow green is nice for portraits, and similar to a medium yellow with a bit darker reds or landscapes. So my question such is, should I go for a yellow green instead of the yellow? Occasional portraits, mostly cityscapes and landscapes and urban stuff as I go for a wander walk.


Cheers.
 

macfred

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On my Super Ikonta 531/16 I use three original Zeiss Ikon filters.
Yellow (x2) as a kind of standard filter for every day use; Yellow/Green (2x) for some portraits
(not for every skin type) and -just like Bernhard said- for greenery/landscapes.
The Orange filter (5x) is very special and I use it rarely.
On my FUJI GW670iii I use a Lite Yellow (1.5x) as a standard filter and -rarely- an Orange filter (5x).
 

Ko.Fe.

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I have very orange, medium yellow and deep green, which is yellow-green officially.
I've done some urban walk will all three. Orange was nothing special, if not worst. Yellow was giving nice hint of the extra contrast and drawing of small details with not so contrasty lenses.
And yellow-green worked nice on people in the urban environment. I took series of shots at "naked bike Toronto". Butt I'm not going to show it here :smile: .
 

RalphLambrecht

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Any views on this? I started reading more and they say the yellow green is nice for portraits, and similar to a medium yellow with a bit darker reds or landscapes. So my question such is, should I go for a yellow green instead of the yellow? Occasional portraits, mostly cityscapes and landscapes and urban stuff as I go for a wander walk.


Cheers.
a light yellow #8 Wratten provides the most realistic representation in B&W
 

MattKing

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a light yellow #8 Wratten provides the most realistic representation in B&W
This varies a bit with the film. T-max 400, as an example has a bit less blue sensitivity so many people don't use a yellow filter with it when they will use a yellow filter with other films.
 

Helios 1984

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I bought a Pentax Yellow-Green, not so long ago, I'll have to finish my roll to compare.
 

DREW WILEY

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A pale yellow-green filter brings typical panchromatic film into similar spectral response as the human eye, since pan film is slightly depressed in
the green. I always have one of these on hand when doing black and white outdoor portraiture, though it is also nice when you need just a tweak of contrast in landscape subjects too, or a more natural effect. Typically needs just one stop of exposure compensation, versus two or three for medium
or dark green, which can render a more Ortho look on pan film.
 

Sirius Glass

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I use light yellow, medium yellow, orange, red and green, but I do not have yellow-green filters for any of the many cameras and formats. So I do not use yellow-green filters by default.
 
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rayonline_nz

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Do you guys use these filters with grad filters? Round or square filters?
The yellow is a standard all round filter. Are there any time when you won't use a filter? Apart from journalism style, night time perhaps?
 

Sirius Glass

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Do you guys use these filters with grad filters?

I do not use grad filters.

Round or square filters?

I use screw-in filters, bayonet filters and series filter with slip-on adapters depending on the camera and lens.

The yellow is a standard all round filter. Are there any time when you won't use a filter? Apart from journalism style, night time perhaps?

I use Skylight or UV filters all the time, and switch to the yellow, orange, ... filter when using those filters will help the composition. That said, when I am using the 35mm camera that is dedicated to black & white film only, I use either a yellow or orange filter much of the time.
 

flavio81

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Green for making male skin look nice/healthy in portraits.

Yellow for extra contrast. Haven't tried it in portraits.

Red for extreme contrast in landscape and eerie whitening in portraits.
 

Leigh B

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YELLOW is RED + GREEN in additive chroma terms.

So what advantage is gained using a GREEN + RED + GREEN filter?

- Leigh
 

DREW WILEY

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Leigh - Yellow is subtractive = minus blue. So it attentuates and darkens a certain amount of blue, but lightens green foliage which reflects both
green and red light. Of course, we don't see the red or yellow of leaves etc until autumn when the chlorophyll is gone; but it's there all along. We
rarely use true red, green, or blue color separation filters in general photography becuase they're so dense (29 red, 58 green, and 47B blue); so other a certain amount of opposite hues do get through the lesser filters, including all yellow filters. But an actual 29 red would block all green and blue
light and allow only red through. A 58 green would block all red and blue. And likewise, if you looked at anything red or green through a 47B filter,
it would look completely black, and only blue itself would pass.
 

DREW WILEY

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Grad filters are a completely different subject. I've never used them on any kind of camera. In fact, I've never seen a picture done with them that
didn't look fishy to me.
 

benjiboy

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I always understood that although most modern monochrome films are called panchromatic ( sensitive to all colours of light) they are still a little over sensitive to blue light and to get the optimum tonal correction you use a yellow/green filter.
 

Leigh B

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Leigh - Yellow is subtractive = minus blue. So it attentuates and darkens a certain amount of blue, but lightens green foliage which reflects both
green and red light. Of course, we don't see the red or yellow of leaves etc until autumn when the chlorophyll is gone; but it's there all along. We
rarely use true red, green, or blue color separation filters in general photography becuase they're so dense (29 red, 58 green, and 47B blue); so other a certain amount of opposite hues do get through the lesser filters, including all yellow filters. But an actual 29 red would block all green and blue
light and allow only red through. A 58 green would block all red and blue. And likewise, if you looked at anything red or green through a 47B filter,
it would look completely black, and only blue itself would pass.
Hi Drew,

I'm quite familiar with color modification, thank you.
Colored filters operate by attenuating the other colors.

Since WHT light is RED + GRN + BLU, and YEL = RED + GRN...
YEL passes RED and GRN and attenuates BLU.
You can call it "minus BLU" if that makes more sense in context.

- Leigh
 

cliveh

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Any views on this? I started reading more and they say the yellow green is nice for portraits, and similar to a medium yellow with a bit darker reds or landscapes. So my question such is, should I go for a yellow green instead of the yellow? Occasional portraits, mostly cityscapes and landscapes and urban stuff as I go for a wander walk.


Cheers.

It depends on what type of film you are using, ortho, pan, colour neg/slide and the lighting you are using. To answer the question we need more details.
 

DREW WILEY

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Leigh - unless you are talking hard separation filters, none of these are pure anyway. What I've found very helpful are the old Kodak Wratten color
filter guide, with the published spectrograms of hundreds of different ones, plus fade factors, transmission figures etc. There are cases where the
eye is fooled into seeing a certain color when the filter actually arrives at it in a different manner. Of course, modern glass filters aren't necessarily
the same as Wratten, and might provide their own spectrograms; but it's a valuable resource anyway, and sometimes turns up in used bookstores, or via book search. Then one can compare that to the spectrogram of any unusual film itself, like extended red or attenuated red (ACROS, for example). I find this more important in the lab when doing really fussy film work like color separations and related precision masking than in the field, where the basic published pan filter factors for daylight seem adequate. But whenever I am working with an unfamiliar black and white film I run it through a whole series of filter tests both here at the coast and at high altitude where the shadows are distinctly bluer. I also have a far larger selection of
filters in the lab, including a number of exotic Wratten gels, than I need in the field. I rarely carry more than two contrast filters when backpacking,
not counting a filter or two for color film.
 

Leigh B

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Leigh - unless you are talking hard separation filters, none of these are pure anyway.
Hi Drew,

Yes, filters can have rather bizarre passbands.
I have response charts for all the filters I use.
They're handy for combining filters to get a specific desired response.

I try to avoid color work if possible, but not always possible.
Having taught color techniques at the photo school, I found some students "got it" right away, others never. Don't know why.

- Leigh
 
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