Color or Black and White
cletus
Registered Users Posts: 1,930 Major grins
I've put a couple shots up in Pathfinder's We need more Black and White thread, but I've got a couple shots that I'm not sure if they would work better in color or black and white. Soooo, I thought I'd start a new thread to put up images in both color and black and white to get other people's opinions on what works for a particular image.
Here goes:
or
or
Here goes:
or
or
0
Comments
The grape vines on the fence row I prefer in color because of the contrast between the blue of the river and the green of the fence posts - Here color seems to play a significant role - cooling calming quieting - and I find this missing in the B&W version. YMMV of course.
Nice idea for a thread tho - Great idea .... I also find that I try many of my pictures both ways AC/DC so to speak B&W vs RGB
Moderator of the Technique Forum and Finishing School on Dgrin
I am not sure but it looked like just for demonstration purpose Cletus used just a desaturate or grey scale convert.
I find using just that is not enough for me to render a decision. I need to go through the full conversion.
It must be a creative thought flaw in my brain, (one of many brain flaws) because I cant envision it, so I have to build it.
Funny I never have a problem envisioning having a cold beer. Go figure?
Cheers,
Tim
Tim,
I used zero-zero's two adjustment layer b&w conversion method. Maybe I just didn't do a very good job! Feel free to post your conversions up here if you like them better. I'd love to see what you did differently.
-Eric
However when I downloaded your color and your black and whites I found that just grey scaling your color was not much different (in my eyes)than your black and white result so I worked on them myself. Both copies I did not save however I did go back and recreate what I did in the first place , on the house.
Yours to the left mine to the right. With a slight tone in this ,which can be adjusted . I can give it other tones without any detail change.
Notice the contrasts between shadow and light also I feel there is more detail in what I did.
Again this is only what my eye sees as better and I am old and shortsighted:D
Tim
That looks really good. That's the kind of stuff I was hoping for when I started this thread!
-Eric
Great thread I like these threads because I learn so much.
I am not sure which I like better either in these two, I want to return an reshoot the subject as well.
I have mixed feelings on this shot B&W vrs Color.
Tim
lynn
Moderator of the Technique Forum and Finishing School on Dgrin
What method are you using for converting color to B&W?
Catapultam habeo. Nisi pecuniam omnem mihi dabis, ad caput tuum saxum immane mittam
http://www.mcneel.com/users/jb/foghorn/ill_shut_up.au
But my biggest breakthrough was just recently when Andy of Moonriver fame
posted his Grand Central Station light pictures. He posted a super color and then a fantastic Black and White of the same shot. I downloaded his 2 shots I then converted the color and started converting to match his black and white.(I used his pictures only for this ,I then deleted them )
He really put some nice tones in his conversion.
I used this with some links to other sites on B&W conversions like this one http://www.photo-i.co.uk/index.html I then fiddle with my photo editing to some similar degree.
For instance, I used to desaturate for B&W and I also used to use just grey scale. Now I convert to grey scale (8bit) then I convert that to RGB color ( 24 bit).
The picture is still Black and White but I have more options for enhancing.
I then can use my tone adjusters for Black point, mid point and White point.
Pressing on my control key gives me a look at original for comparison.
Here I can tweek shadow ,overexposure lighten or darken skies etc...
I then sharpen just a little .
If I like it I keep it then I go to color balance and I adjust sliders to achieve the tone/tint I want for the photo.(this I found by trying to emulate Andy’s shot.) I constantly look at B&W that are contest winners or editor choices and try to see how they achieved this or that.
Some shots I take are in B&W originally so I can see how off GS and DS are from true? B&W.
I dunno, I am just experimenting improvising and trying to learn. I have only been doing this (digital photography)for 2 months now so consider my methods with a heavy grain of caution hehe.
Cheers ,
Tim
While demonstrating the change in contrast, you've come upon an interesting
derivation of the original. I think it looks pretty cool.
Ian
"The Edge... there is no honest way to explain it because the only people who really know where it is are the ones who have gone over."-Hunter S.Thompson
As a rule of thumb, I find most conversions to B&W benefit from a healthy kick in contrast to begin with.
or
I cropped it as well, now I'm stepping on wxwaxy's toes too.
Tim
I agree; his seems softer while yours pops out. I haven't done any color->BW conversions recently (not since I had to write my own software to do it :-), but I'm likely to do some soon since I'm shooting a wedding in 2 weeks. What did you use to convert? What tone did you introduce?
jimf@frostbytes.com
But from what I read it is similar to using the curves in Monochrome?
It involves adjusting black mid and white points some brightness ,contrast and intensity. Then adjusting color balance for a desired tone. That is the shortened version.
Tim