perkeleellinen
Subscriber
I had good success with a green filter shooting in woodland. I use an orange to flatter skin and a red to increase sky contrast.
I concur with this selection and use(s), fully. The yellow-green, I also use for portraits.The basic set is medium yellow (Wratten #8), yellow-green (#11), and red (#25). The #8 filter is basic. It darkens the sky a bit and corrects the color rendition so that things stand out better. The #11 is particularly useful for foliage, which it lightens a bit. The #25 is usually used for dramatic sky effects, but is also handy as a contrast filter to lighten reds and oranges or darken blues. All these filters also filter out ultraviolet light and help control haze. A polarizer is very handy for sky effects and to control reflections. I find an orange filter (#15) very useful in the desert and red rock country. Some people find a stringer yellow filter (#12, for instance) useful. It gives more sky darkening and haze penetration than the #8. Some like to use a full green filter (#61), but I see it as a contrast filter mostly. If you look at a scene through a filter, you can get a pretty good idea of what its effects will be. (This takes a bit of practice, but you will learn quickly.)
And what i need for very strong sunny day dusty and flat sky?

There isn't much that is going to help you when you get the "White Skies" after a dust storm.
However, when the skies have cleared a bit an Orange or Red filter will help to put some tone back in the skies.
An Orange filter should also lighten the orange/red sand you guys have a bit too - so reducing the overall contrast.
Shooting early in the morning or late in the evening might also help a bit.
Overall, unfortunately, you are going to be seriously challenged
Martin

I recently took long (12km) hike in a nearby mountain park, with my RB67, 2 lenses and a bunch of filters. The forest is sub-alpine, and the foilage on the trees is very dark green. I thought I'd try out my green filter with the hopes of lightening the foliage and darkening the sky. In fact, it was quite a cloudy day. I used up 4 rolls of film. Almost all the shots were with the green filter (A sunpak "PO1", bought used). I used a filter factor of 4, and opened up 2 stops). To my surprise the trees are almost black. All of the negatives with the filter are a bit underexposed, but except for the trees I could probably work with them. On researching it further it seems I should have used 2 1/2 stops (6 ff), but half a stop out shouldn't have this much effect - or so I would have thought. I arrived at the 2 stop figure by using a light meter with and without the filter in front of it.
Does anybody have any thoughts as to what is going on here?
Is there any website that has all of the filter factors for the different manufacturers? I can't even find a source for Tiffen filter factors. Hoya publishes theirs, but that's about all I can find.
Incidentally, on the way out (mostly uphill on rough terrain) I swore I would never do this again with that heavy a camera, but time dims bad memories, so I may change my mind.
What filters do you guys use with B&W film? I heard that yellow was useful for all weathers and red for darker skies...anything else?
Because of the overcast weather, you were left with primarily cool colors exposing your film. This slows it a little bit, first of all.
Then, and primarily, the green filter I know of (#58) is actually designed as a color separation filter, so it has a sharp cutoff. Therefore, only green light exposes your film with that filter. Since most of the light at the scene was bluish, and the filter blocks blue, you were left with a very tiny amount of light exposing your film.
2F/2F,what results are you getting with the blue filter on the Ortho film
Blue filter w/ ortho film would result in the effect of a very old fashioned "color blind" blue only sensitive film by getting rid of the green light that also affects ortho. Ortho is sensitive to UV, blue and green light. I believe it would darken foliage dramatically, but I haven't tried it myself.
I probably wasn't clear enough. I don't use the blue filter on Ilford Ortho. I use it (80A) on regular panchromatic film in formats other than 4x5 (since that, and I believe 8x10, are the only formats in which I have found the emulsion), when I want the film to look more orthochromatic.
I haven't tried Efke/Adox Ortho yet, or Rollei's, but I intend to!
This guy has quite a list out there, but alas, I see no PO1. My impression is that some yellow/green filters with designations like X1 or X2 might do what you want. I admit to having acquired a few of such items to fit some of my cameras, but alas, haven't really tried them out - My GAS got ahead of my laboratory work!
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