Anyone ever used a Sepia-coloured filter for B&W?
Wondering how it compares, say, to a red filter for landscapes.
Anyone ever used a Sepia-coloured filter for B&W?
Wondering how it compares, say, to a red filter for landscapes.
Lachlan.
You miss 100% of the shots you never take. -- Wayne Gretzky
Sepia is a combination of red and yellow to make the brown. Could be very nice.
Mark Woods
Large Format B&W
Cinematography Mentor at the American Film Institute
Past President of the Pasadena Society of Artists
Director of Photography
Pasadena, CA
www.markwoods.com
Look at the color wheel; it will darken opposite colors and lighten similar colors!
If you have PhotoShop and a scanner, scan the filter on a white piece of paper, take the CMYK or RGB values of the filter once you have set the correct white levels then open up the Kuhler color program in Photoshop and see for yourself the exact opposite colors and the similar colors right there on screen!
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