Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2012/01/16
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]>> to manage crossover. > That is such an EVIL term! Yes, I had several photographers tell me that. Funny. > I had a brief case full of CC and LB filters and a color temperature meter > that went everywhere with me; plus a couple pounds of light source filters > and rolls of filter material to put over windows. Sounds about right. > And STILL received the occasional call from the lab saying, "it appears > you have a bit of crossover in the shot of [whatever]." It's amazing how unless the [whatever] is "bigfoot attacking the pope" this can create so much difficulty. I only ever called the photographer to check to see if they were willing to go to the expense of me fixing it. I so used to hope that they would say "no, don't bother, I'll re-shoot it" but I think that happened once, and the other maybe hundred times (I think it happened about once a week) they said "you fix it". Printers and photograhers develop mutual resentments ;-) > It usually meant a softbox scrim had yellowed, or a flash tube was on the > way out since the last time I read their kelvin temperature. Or a cloud partially covered the sun, or . . . there are dozens of causes. But yes, I understand your pain. Marty