jadin
The Mad Hatter
- Joined
- Feb 18, 2004
- Messages
- 1,753
- Reaction score
- 10
- Location
- Down the Rabbit Hole.
- Website
- jadinhanson.smugmug.com
I decided to experiment and see if I could replicate the feel of film b&w with my digital camera, not just 'greyscaling' it.
First off I set the camera to b&w....... :roll: Secondly I set my ISO to 800 (it's max) and then turned on ISO boost as high as it would go. (basically two steps above 800 ISO) Third I set the camera's tone compensation to 'more contrast'.
The results are straight out of the camera with zero editing save a resize.
I plan on doing some minor lighting adjustments but wanted to know what you thought of my 'black and white' film-look attempts. (the musicians are two friends in a garage band)
First off I set the camera to b&w....... :roll: Secondly I set my ISO to 800 (it's max) and then turned on ISO boost as high as it would go. (basically two steps above 800 ISO) Third I set the camera's tone compensation to 'more contrast'.
The results are straight out of the camera with zero editing save a resize.
I plan on doing some minor lighting adjustments but wanted to know what you thought of my 'black and white' film-look attempts. (the musicians are two friends in a garage band)