Juan Valdenebro
Member
Some photographers, a few, like to photograph with an orange filter on their most used lens... It darkens blues: in sunny days it makes sky and clouds look contrasty on the negative, just like we see them... Under softer light, it cleans skin and lightens yellows, oranges and reds... Its effects vary depending on the type of black and white negative film. Up to that point, all common...
But some of those photographers feel their orange filter gives their soft light images, overcast, a different tone too... And I'm not talking about a different tone coming from lighter printing of orange subjects photographed in the scene; they say general tone and contrast are improved in a peculiar way, one with more tonal separation and inner contrast...
Can that be possible?
But some of those photographers feel their orange filter gives their soft light images, overcast, a different tone too... And I'm not talking about a different tone coming from lighter printing of orange subjects photographed in the scene; they say general tone and contrast are improved in a peculiar way, one with more tonal separation and inner contrast...
Can that be possible?