I have recently become interested in using colored lens filters for my film camera when using black and white film. Colored lenses can dramatically impact the grey tones and contrast when shooting in black and white – results you would otherwise not get from a “naked” lens. When shooting with film, I like to stay out of Photoshop as much as possible other than basic cleaning. Sure, I could increase the contrast of a photo with curves or levels, but why not do it the old-fashioned way instead. Let me tell you, the latter is much more fulfilling. Nonetheless, for those of you who do not have lens filters and/or would rather simulate it in Photoshop, these digital lens filter Photoshop actions will be the next best thing. Below I write about what colored lens filters do to black and white film and how Photoshop can roughly simulate it.
Read the rest of this post…
Posts Tagged ‘black-and-white-photography’
Click on one of the items below to go to the postDigital Lens Filters
Posted on 12 November, 2006 at 11:23pm with 4 comments
Highlighted Content
No related posts.
Recent Posts
- somerandomdude: I am a little intimidated by the size of this bread. tp://tweetphoto.com/15195545
- somerandomdude: I’m at Nicholas Restaurant (318 SE Grand Ave, SE Pine St, Portland). http://4sq.com/4BMmNE
- somerandomdude: RT @alexismadrigal: I am marveling at how much attention 500 tea partiers get when they protest. The first Earth Day? 20 million people.
- somerandomdude: I favorited a YouTube video — Starcraft Terran Theme 2 – piano cover http://youtu.be/1FjHAzpgEuw?a
- somerandomdude: If you read my article on Flash and the iPad, one of my concerns seems to be unfortunately becoming reality – http://bit.ly/brN2zR


