I realize This Is NOT anything unique or groundbreaking for experienced photographers, but i am still just a beginner. 
I rarely shoot color. I have had a roll of Kodak 200 in a spare Minolta for about 7-8 months now.
I used it just yesterday to take a frame of an old sign that still holds a lot of its color.
What i noticed was....when looking through the SLR with color film, it was like i was seeing COLOR In The View Finder for the first.time (in a long time).
At first, i did not even realize it. Then it hit me, i was not thinking so much about...Light/Shadows/Contrast. I was thinking (and seeing) much more, just, about the colors of the sign.
I realized that, even though EVERYTHING in my viewfinder is always Real Life Color..... THAT fact almost goes away when i have the camera to me face (with B&W film)
I am, for lack of a better term, just a Street Photographer. In the last two years, i guess i have naturally just starting seeing in terms of how things will Look/Print in the B&W Darkroom.
No doubt this is a "normal" occurrence, but it was enlightening none-the-less. (that is actually all one word)

I rarely shoot color. I have had a roll of Kodak 200 in a spare Minolta for about 7-8 months now.
I used it just yesterday to take a frame of an old sign that still holds a lot of its color.
What i noticed was....when looking through the SLR with color film, it was like i was seeing COLOR In The View Finder for the first.time (in a long time).
At first, i did not even realize it. Then it hit me, i was not thinking so much about...Light/Shadows/Contrast. I was thinking (and seeing) much more, just, about the colors of the sign.
I realized that, even though EVERYTHING in my viewfinder is always Real Life Color..... THAT fact almost goes away when i have the camera to me face (with B&W film)
I am, for lack of a better term, just a Street Photographer. In the last two years, i guess i have naturally just starting seeing in terms of how things will Look/Print in the B&W Darkroom.
No doubt this is a "normal" occurrence, but it was enlightening none-the-less. (that is actually all one word)
