Ray
Thanks for your test also, I believe that Graeme was giving
the right direction-
the effect will go even further if the red and the green
channels are clipping in the highlights, the further the kelvins of the light
source go down
and will completely be disasterous if the contrast of the
scene is above average,
which unfortunately with tungsten lighting will happen very
often.
>>>BTW when I borrowed the last blue filter in stock from my local
photo dealer, he told me he no longer stocked these correction filters since you
can do the same thing in Photoshop...I am not sure if I should ask him to read
this thread : )<<<
I can only hope young Photographers simply use some films
before these are dying out completely.
There´s so much to learn about theory and film is very basic
in these approaches, so there´s no
photoshop to hide behind, if you wanted to achieve something
you had to think it over, otherwise it would not happen.
I would propose anybody who wants to learn digital photography
should try to shoot some rolls of B&W tri-X
or HP5 and find out about contrast,exposure and gradation. Now
with this as a background you will already
have most of digital photography´s problems in mind and this
will help to get around them.
But of course it´s kind of difficult to ask someone who
learns this, to buy an old 35mm first.......<G>
Greetings from Munich
Stefan