ChristopherCoy
Subscriber
Didn't know where to put this, so its going here. I'm figuring this isn't a new thing, but I found it very interesting. I might like to try it one day, just to say that I did.
The filmmaker shows us a colour print which was done a hundred years ago. And then the answer to "But how was it made?" is "in the Computer"? Ay Dios ...
I learned it from my job, which is prepress for a print shop. In the old days, that's how you made color plates for color printing. You photographed the mock up onto some giant film with a giant, large format camera onto B&W film, and used red, green, blue, and no filter for the C,M,Y,K plates. The no filter exposure was used for the black, and was usually reduced somewhat, so as not to over saturate the final print. The black or K layer isn't necessary, as full cyan, magenta, and yellow will produce a black. But you'll get a deeper looking print with more dynamic range if you do use it. It just takes some experimenting to get the right amount, or you'll make the final print too dark. Usually around 20% will do.
Thank you! Yes, there must have been a bit of a breeze between exposures, but I was too preoccupied with not bumping my tripod to notice in the moment.Well done! I do note that the trees in the upper left show some "fringing". Was there a little breeze between the exposures?
The filmmaker shows us a colour print which was done a hundred years ago. And then the answer to "But how was it made?" is "in the Computer"? Ay Dios ...
This is the way it works without a computer:
You're right, good thing I have not just one black and white image, but three of them!The reason you use black and white is because you want black and white.
You're right, good thing I have not just one black and white image, but three of them!
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Filtered Tulips No. 2 by dourbalistar, on Flickr
p.s. The reason why I do photography is to have fun, experiment, and hopefully make some interesting images.![]()
Thank you for the kind words, foc! Although, arguably, it would be simpler to just shoot color film. I mean, the reason why you shoot color is because you want color, right?I think you did a great job of it and yes it is fun to experiment and I like your 3 filtered tulips shots showing the different filtration effects in B&W.
This is colour photography at its simplest.
Why bother with modern tripack colour film when you can do this???![]()
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