I've seen nice B&W pic with a very nice contrast..How do you actually get nice B&W without the need for editing? Thanks..
and leaving that conversion up to your camera... that is disgusting to me.
there are some books in our National Library on B&W photography, some are for film and some are for digital.I've seen nice B&W pic with a very nice contrast..How do you actually get nice B&W without the need for editing? Thanks..
Well, it may be disgusting to you, but TS is obviously unwilling to do post-processing. So what else is left?
wait for the right lighting like the old pros did
which reminds me,
never to use in-camera editing tools
Well, it may be disgusting to you, but TS is obviously unwilling to do post-processing. So what else is left?
I've seen nice B&W pic with a very nice contrast..How do you actually get nice B&W without the need for editing? Thanks..
shoot film.
otherwise, b&w conversion, that step is the most important when converting digital color to bnw.. because it is the step that determines how you show what you want to show, and whether you have done it effectively.
and leaving that conversion up to your camera... that is disgusting to me.
in that case, film is disgusting?
:bsmilie:
wow, ok
when you buy film, it jumps into your pocket and you pay...
i don't think you have read up much about film :bsmilie:
:bsmilie:
wow, ok
when you buy film, it jumps into your pocket and you pay...
i don't think you have read up much about film :bsmilie:
Yes, I really do not know the technicality of film, but it was a more straight forward flow for me:bsmilie: leave the tweaking to the lab
Maybe someday, fujifilm, kodak , agfa, and all other film makers, will release firmwares where we coud load into our cams to make the pics look like the products of their film....that might be fun.:bsmilie: