b & w

chrisjleechrisjlee Registered Users Posts: 384 Major grins
edited December 5, 2005 in Technique
Do any of you know any good tips to optimize black and white photography? Like if the client wanted just black and white photography what advice would come to your mind.
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Chris
Detroit Wedding Photography Blog
Canon 10D | 20D | 5D

Comments

  • ruttrutt Registered Users Posts: 6,511 Major grins
    edited December 5, 2005
    The best description of how to make really great B&W conversion is a chapter in Dan Margulis' book Professional Photoshop called Friend and Foe in Black and White. This is often too much for people, but it's the real deal. Read it and you'll know what's going on and how to make it work for you instead of against you.

    The "for dummies method" for portraits is often just to use the green (or rarely the blue) channel as the starting point. Then you can use curves to enhance the contrast and sharpening to bring out the detail.

    In between these two extremes, there have been servel thread here. See:

    http://www.dgrin.com/showthread.php?t=14266

    as a starting point.
    If not now, when?
  • mercphotomercphoto Registered Users Posts: 4,550 Major grins
    edited December 5, 2005
    chrisjlee wrote:
    Do any of you know any good tips to optimize black and white photography? Like if the client wanted just black and white photography what advice would come to your mind.
    There is a lot to B&W depending on how much work you want to do. An easy route is a Fred Miranda plug-in for Photoshop that helps you in b&w conversions. It has some standard transformations, such as normal, or red filter, green filter, etc. Plus it has a customized channel mixer where you choose a primary channel (R, G or B) and set a percent for that, then you have a slider to choose the relative balance between the remaining two channels. Very convenient. And there is a third method.

    More complex methods abound but this plug-in does a good job for minimal user effort.
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