I agree but mainly what I find interesting (and it would probably be explained easily by someone who knew even a tiny bit more about it) is how the black and white coversion process stomped the hell out of the longer wavelengths (red) but not the shorter ones (green). For comparison note the dot of red and green next to the foot on the bottom right and compare the bow tie and artificial tree needles in the middle and upper right.
I think I need red and green filters for shooting black and white. It'd be interesting to see what you get.
2 comments:
this is much more interesting b&w.
I agree but mainly what I find interesting (and it would probably be explained easily by someone who knew even a tiny bit more about it) is how the black and white coversion process stomped the hell out of the longer wavelengths (red) but not the shorter ones (green). For comparison note the dot of red and green next to the foot on the bottom right and compare the bow tie and artificial tree needles in the middle and upper right.
I think I need red and green filters for shooting black and white. It'd be interesting to see what you get.
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