blakley
blakley
kmack, A large-format camera can give you that extremely shallow depth of field, and a lot of studio photographers used to use view cameras or TLRs.
nomade, you don't really need a sepia filter; just do this:
1. Get the image the way you like it in B&W and make sure it's in grayscale mode.
2. Click image>mode>duotone
3. Select "black" as the first color and a warmish color you like (I use Pantone 4525 C) as the second color.
4. Adjust the black and color curves if you feel like it.
5. Click image>mode>rgb
And there you go. The results look like this (shot on an M3 with XP2 Super at f/1.2, which gives very narrow depth of field too...)
nomade, you don't really need a sepia filter; just do this:
1. Get the image the way you like it in B&W and make sure it's in grayscale mode.
2. Click image>mode>duotone
3. Select "black" as the first color and a warmish color you like (I use Pantone 4525 C) as the second color.
4. Adjust the black and color curves if you feel like it.
5. Click image>mode>rgb
And there you go. The results look like this (shot on an M3 with XP2 Super at f/1.2, which gives very narrow depth of field too...)
