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?


I use blue to accentuate mist and fog. .
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?

It depends on what you are after, doesn't it? You can use no filter and get pictures that look like reality. Or you can use various filters based on the color palette in front of you. Is there green grass, trees, and flowers? Or is it a desert? Are you making a portrait? How do you want those colors in front of you to look?Green to accentuate green/turquoise colors as lighter, and their opposite colors as darker.
Orange for the opposite, to render orange/red subjects lighter, and blue/green/turquoise darker.
Sometimes yellow for a milder effect on rendering blue darker.
Sometimes red for a strong effect on green and/or red, or a blue sky.
Generally it's just about building contrast in the gray-scale between colors that would otherwise look similar and perhaps boringly uniform. Think of a red rose, for example. If you shoot it without color filters, the stem, leaves, and flower will all be of a similar tonality in the gray scale. If you use a red filter, the flower will appear much brighter, while the leaves and stem turn much darker. Now if you use a green filter, you get the opposite: a very dark flower and much brighter leaves and stem.
Color filters can also be very helpful if you make portraits of someone with poor complexion, for example. But you have to be careful, so you don't change the whole frame too much. If you want to smooth out fair skin with lots of red pimples, for example, you might be tempted to use an orange or red filter, but if that person has blue eyes, they will be rendered a lot darker than normal, for example.
It's a compromise no matter how you twist and turn it, but they sure can be helpful.
To TareqPhoto: "And what i need for very strong sunny day dusty and flat sky?"
Answer: Skill.It depends on what you are after, doesn't it? You can use no filter and get pictures that look like reality. Or you can use various filters based on the color palette in front of you. Is there green grass, trees, and flowers? Or is it a desert? Are you making a portrait? How do you want those colors in front of you to look?
Contemplating your Navel again, eh?Every time I use a orange I have to peel it!
Jeff
no color there, very hot and so high humidity, and no green or just some trees around and no much flowers as well, not desert but a lot of buildings where the desert was and i was living near of the beach, so it is a dry hot humid place and it is hazy and color temp is awful.

Tareq, you might just need to move somewhere else!
A polarizer will help cut through the haze and improve contrast by reducing scattered light.
I think early morning or late in the day will give you better pictures. Maybe try night photos if you haven't done that.
Buy a quality polarizer; they are not all the same. I think Neopan 100 is a good place to start with B+W night shots. Its reciprocity characteristics make it easy to use for long exposures, and you will get fine grain. Then try other films to find what you like best.
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