- Post score: 5
- #1
Recent landscape pictures in this forum (Winston Churchill (Sir) and other photographers have been in monotone or B&W. These images have caught my eye for the dramatic way they are shown in a simpler image, devoid of color impact. It’s a throwback to the 60’s when I shot Tri-X, Plus-X and Panatomic-X because it was the only thing I could afford. Loading Nikkor reels and mixing Microdol X was a lot simpler than figuring out LrC ….. yatta yadda.. Fast forward to now..
In October we went to Kitty Hawk, N.C. for vacation. I took along a vintage 50mm manual focus lens to try on my D850… just to have fun. I felt re-connected to a simpler era with my “hybrid” setup. Pick a shutter speed and f/stop, iso auto did the rest.
When I put the shots in the computer I was pleased to see the old glass worked well. Then I saw Winston Churchill’s (Sir) monochromatic waterscape (w/old dock pilings) and… . I gotta try this! I started thinking “less is, or can be more”. Back in the computer I duplicated the color shot and “monochromed” one. I’m seeing details in the B&W rendering below that I totally missed in the color version. I realize her amazing image was created by another process but the monochromatic option has merits to consider. Ya’ll remember Ansel Adams?
In October we went to Kitty Hawk, N.C. for vacation. I took along a vintage 50mm manual focus lens to try on my D850… just to have fun. I felt re-connected to a simpler era with my “hybrid” setup. Pick a shutter speed and f/stop, iso auto did the rest.
When I put the shots in the computer I was pleased to see the old glass worked well. Then I saw Winston Churchill’s (Sir) monochromatic waterscape (w/old dock pilings) and… . I gotta try this! I started thinking “less is, or can be more”. Back in the computer I duplicated the color shot and “monochromed” one. I’m seeing details in the B&W rendering below that I totally missed in the color version. I realize her amazing image was created by another process but the monochromatic option has merits to consider. Ya’ll remember Ansel Adams?
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