Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 1998/11/10
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Filters are used to alter the quality of the light hitting the film. When looking at a scene, whether using color or B&W film, you, as a photographer, must judge what it is in the scene, that you want to alter. If there is a blue sky, and you are using color film, you may want to use a polarizer to make it deep blue. It will also eliminate the blueish cast on green foliage. It has a similar effect on B&W by "cleaning-up foliage" and darkening the sky. With B&W film, a yellow filter will make a blue sky darker and make clouds a little whiter, and foliage a little darker. An orange filter will do this, only a little stronger. A red filter will again do this, only very strongly. A green filter will turn foliage and sky nearly white. A light blue filter will turn a blue sky white and green foliage lighter than normal, and is good for portraiture. A dark blue filter can give you a moon scape look. The summary of all of this, is... filters are as personal as film. Some people like Velvia, some like E100SW, some like K64. In order to "like" a particular film, you must have certain feelings about its palate, it's graininess, etc. The filter you choose for a particular scene is as personal as film. Or as personal as the camera and lens you choose. When making a photograph, you should have some result in mind. This will dictate, for you, which film, which filter, which lens, which camera... etc. Do you want to increase contrast? Darken the sky? Lighten-up the foliage? Separate the old barn wood from the peeling paint color? And the list goes on forever. There are only a few well established B&W filters. Red, orange, yellow, green, yellow/green, blue. Various shades are provided by some manufacturers, eg; light yellow, medium yellow, dark yellow, light red, dark red, light blue, dark blue... etc... But they still accomplish the same thing, just to a lesser or greater degree. No one can possibly tell you how and when to use filters. This is part of your own vision. Experiment with the basic colors for B&W photography and develop your own style. B+W, Heliopan, Tiffen, etc... all publish free booklets that explain the actions of their various filters. This should give you a clue as to where to start. Jim At 08:19 PM 11/10/98 -0500, it was written... >I usually carry and sometimes use an orange. > >kw >> >>What are your favourite combination of filters for B&W photo work? I am >>currently using yellow-green, blue and red. I am curious to know what the >>users normally carry as oppose to professionals. >> >>Cheers, >> >>Lee