ND not so neutral?
NorthernFocus
Registered Users Posts: 1,347 Major grins
I recently started using a 3 stop ND filter for the first time. I used it on a couple of waterfall shots with good results. But then I used it for a sunrise seascape shot and it totally altered the color of the shot. I thought "neutral density" meant it alters brightness/luminosity only with no alteration of color.
Here's the shot in question. I was totally bummed because this looks like it was taken with some kind of rose colored filter. The lighting that morning was much more yellow than red. I tried altering WB and color tone in PP but in order to go far enough to get rid of the red, it doesn't look natural.
Comments/suggestions will be much appreciated...
Here's the shot in question. I was totally bummed because this looks like it was taken with some kind of rose colored filter. The lighting that morning was much more yellow than red. I tried altering WB and color tone in PP but in order to go far enough to get rid of the red, it doesn't look natural.
Comments/suggestions will be much appreciated...
0
Comments
http://danielplumer.com/
Facebook Fan Page
Link to my Smugmug site
J
http://jbr.smugmug.com/
"When you were born, you cried and the world rejoiced... Live your life so that when you die, the world cries and you rejoice"
It looks very nice as it is, but if you want to try to correct the tint again, I would try the WB with offset or fiddle with the hue in the reds.
http://pyryekholm.kuvat.fi/
I guess I shouldn't overthink it. In this particular lighting situation the filter brought out the red in the light and that's all there is to it. Based on feedback here it seems others like the photo so what the hey...
Thanks to eveyone who commented.
My Photo Gallery:Northern Focus Photography
I wish I was half the man that my dog thinks I am...
Depending on the brand, some are not as neutral as they advertise. I have experience with Cokin and Hi-Tech, and Cokin's gave me a purple cast to all my shots, so I bought Hi-Techs instead, and then called Cokin on it, and they told me it was my technique that caused it. I use the same technique on the Hi-Techs, and never have a problem. What it is depending on the brand, their filters can caused different wavelengths of light to not make it through the filter to the sensor, so one wavelength of light will tend to dominate the scene where the filter was, depending if it was a grad, or a a solid, and it also depends on the quality of the IR filter on you CMOS.
Here is good reading:
http://www.fredmiranda.com/forum/topic/649248
-Andy
I don't have any GNDs, but I've heard the same thing.
Regardless, It's an excellent image!!
Images in the Backcountry
My SmugMug Customizations | Adding CSS to Your Site | SEO for the Photographer | Locate Your Page/Widget Number | SmugMug Help Desk
Dan
http://danielplumer.com/
Facebook Fan Page
Thanks for the comment, Mike.
Dan, good idea. I will PM Ron too .
My Photo Gallery:Northern Focus Photography
I wish I was half the man that my dog thinks I am...
I don't know anything, you all should know that by now
Even with my Singh-Ray filters (which are more "neutral" than the Cokin filters), there is a very slight color cast, much more noticeable on the 3-stop than the 2-stop which isn't really an issue. If my photos look pink/magenta it's either because the actual sky/conditions, or because I processed them that way (by changing the color balance or playing with curves or changing the white balance), moreso than the filter. I often do change the color balance (increasing the reds and decreasing the greens).
Photo Gallery | Blog | I'm Unemployed!
I too like the shot you ended up whether it was intended or not.
Aaron Newman
Website:www.CapturingLightandEmotion.com
Facebook: Capturing Light and Emotion
Yes usually you can fix it with change of WB in camera with a custom WB, or fix in post. Another reason to shoot in RAW.
Basically my technique is to meter with the grads and solids on the camera, and then capture. I usually have pretty good luck with this. If the meter is underexposed still at 30 sec, then I switch to Bulb, and calculate after that.
The girl from Omega Satter (Cokin's USA Rep), told me I was supposed to meter with the filters off the camera, then put them on and capture, without changing the shutter speed once I put them on. I told her she was batshit crazy. I said "So once you meter, and then put the grads or solids or combo thereof on the the camera, you're not supposed to compensate the exposure for say the 3 stops of ND you just put on. She said yes, that is the way she did it, and she never has a problem with color casts. I told her because her shots were black (underexposed) . She said they stand by their product, and she has never heard any reports of color casts caused by their product. I showed her numerous internet articles and forum posts proving it, and she still defended her techinque. Moron.
-Andy