Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2007/05/30
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]LIKE WOW !!!!!!!!!!!!! :-) Holy cow what an incredible collection of wonderful responses and suggestions! Thank you every body. Am I settled on colour or B&W? Nope! :-) Confused? Oh a little, but after reading and re-reading the posts I learned we don't all look at the same things in a photograph. Nor relate to colours in similar fashion. Where some thought in B&W the contrast was OK others felt it too harsh. Or in the case of the colour, the subject was too confusing with the colour of the "million dollar" tapestry behind. I also received samples of corrected versions.. very helpful indeed. I put a 13X19 colour print in the living room and same size B&W in the dining room. Then as I carried on making prints from the same assignment, I'd break off, go look at the prints to see which I preferred. Damn what a chore. :-) Particularly after reading suggestions pouring in on screen with improved picture versions. Wow what a learning experience that has been! However, when I look at the improved version B&W as many suggested, cut contrast, change levels and curves in an attempt to bring out more detail in the clothing and facial skin, there isn't any question it made a great improvement. Certainly to my one good eye. I learned a great deal about fiddling the level controls for a better looking image. So in that sense you folks helped me improve or certainly understand the manual levels technique better than I ever did. A big thanks for that one. I believe both images are fine when they aren't compared side by each. Both received improvements from your suggestions, a couple I should've seen as I was preparing the image for printing. Burning in as such was one I missed. Bad move on my part missing that one. They will not be used as we've seen them today, side by each. The producer I'm working with about this doctor in the picture wanted to see how the images would compare for insertion on the production tape. He sided with the colour for obvious reasons, it's a colour TV program. But there are other converted colour to B&W photos of scenes he's going to use for an "archival look." A background note: The doctor in the image is 93 years and as spry and bright as one could be even with all his life experiences and responsibilities way beyond what many of us would want to cope with. Obviously he isn't practicing, but still very involved with two medical schools in Victoria and Vancouver. The day of the shoot everyone involved was up at 5 a.m., gathered in one location to catch the 7am.hour & half ferry ride to the mainland, we started shooting about 10.30 and didn't stop until 3.30 in the afternoon! No breaks, it was steady move from scene to scene. At the wrap the good doctor was in better shape than I at 78! :-) Once again many thanks to all for your wonderful and learned responses. This is what the LUG family is; learning about photography and making better shooters and printers out of all of us. Regards to all, ted