venchka
Veteran
I know one roll does not prove much except that I don't know what I'm doing. What else is new?
Anyway, I gave my first ever roll of BW400CN to Walgreen's for processing and scanning only. The scanned images are GREEN. I saw two images from XP-2 in one of the galleries here. They were GREEN also.
I loaded my scans into Adobe's Lightroom. Greyscale Conversion is awful. Antique Greyscale is even worse. I resorted to lowering the saturation to the max. Kinda ok. Then I printed the image on an HP color laser printer. The print was PURPLE. So I told the printer to print greyscale. Results were not too shabby.
I have seen stunning work produced with BW400CN. Google GeeBeePhoto for the best examples I have found. Some of the best B&W work I've seen period. I wish I knew how Graham does it. Perhaps he will share some of his wisdom with me.
All of this begs the question: Why not just shoot color? If I find an image that wants to be B&W just turn down the saturation? HUH?
OOPS! Examples would help.
Anyway, I gave my first ever roll of BW400CN to Walgreen's for processing and scanning only. The scanned images are GREEN. I saw two images from XP-2 in one of the galleries here. They were GREEN also.
I loaded my scans into Adobe's Lightroom. Greyscale Conversion is awful. Antique Greyscale is even worse. I resorted to lowering the saturation to the max. Kinda ok. Then I printed the image on an HP color laser printer. The print was PURPLE. So I told the printer to print greyscale. Results were not too shabby.
I have seen stunning work produced with BW400CN. Google GeeBeePhoto for the best examples I have found. Some of the best B&W work I've seen period. I wish I knew how Graham does it. Perhaps he will share some of his wisdom with me.
All of this begs the question: Why not just shoot color? If I find an image that wants to be B&W just turn down the saturation? HUH?
OOPS! Examples would help.
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