Denton
Established
One of the techniques some painters use is to view their developing works or a scene to be painted through a heavy red filter. This helps removes the color and reduces it to pure tonal values. The point being that many (not all) attractive paintings must respect the interplay of value contrast, despite being in color. A good B&W rendition would be helping this often unrecognized aspect of a good color painting.
What if one set the monitor to B&W, not for the final result to be B&W, but to address this tonal component when the print is selected for color printing? Is this another aspect of fine art that can help select better color tonal contrast?
Denton
What if one set the monitor to B&W, not for the final result to be B&W, but to address this tonal component when the print is selected for color printing? Is this another aspect of fine art that can help select better color tonal contrast?
Denton