Agreed! If a thing's worth doing, it's worth overdoing!Go mad and add a red filter to it!
Steve.
Agreed! If a thing's worth doing, it's worth overdoing!
Yes, I'd noticed that too!That must be the way HDR fans think!
Steve.
This is one of the areas where processing a digital colour image to B&W is better than the old way.As Mark said - as per colour film with reflections. The selective angle effect (that causes disportionate darking of parts of the sky) is best avoided with black and white by using a coloured filter. The biggest caveat on a red filter would be the possibility of blocked shadows. As skylight is blue, the red filter will hold back more detail in the shadows than the highlights, so you get more contrast and possible detail loss. Use a red filter and underexpose for the moonlight effect.
Orange is like yellow, but more so. It's the first filter where you might see a lightening of foliage (the Wood effect, named after a person, not a plank) which becomes greater with a red filter. Orange can be useful with wood grain and certain types of stone (buildings).
I generally just use minus-blue (Wratten 12 from memory), orange, red and a couple of shades of green, with a polariser reserved for reflections (which in my photography I don't encounter much).
Yes, I'd noticed that too!
This is one of the areas where processing a digital colour image to B&W is better than the old way.
Using Nik SilverEfex Pro or Topaz B&W Effects, you can not only dial in the shade of the colour filter you want, you can also adjust the strength of the effect, so you have full control over the result.
In the "good old days" you put the filter on but didn't know exactly what the result would look like until you developed and printed the film.
I don't think I ever used a Yellow filter with B&W film, I normally used a stronger Orange, or Red if I really wanted to overemphasize things, although, as you rightly point out, you can deepen the shadows too much with a Red filter.
And if you shoot that ood Kodak film wide open at ISO 1 , you'll have some beuatiful all white frames to contrast well with yor IR skies!oh yeah.....and you'll get black sky's with that Rollei IR and R72 for definite