[LargeFormat] Tungsten Filter Reverse Use

Lee Carmichael largeformat@f32.net
Tue Jul 16 19:32:49 2002


here is a site that uses the warming technique very nicely.
http://www.thalmann.com/

Kerry is known for doing this.

lee
----- Original Message -----
From: "Les Newcomer" <lnphoto@twmi.rr.com>
To: <largeformat@f32.net>
Sent: Tuesday, July 16, 2002 5:17 PM
Subject: Re: [LargeFormat] Tungsten Filter Reverse Use


> I usually use a heavy warming filter to do sunsets, 81EF and an 81C if I
> recall.
>
> If you add an 80A you'd be adding blue and yes it would get less yellow,
> You'd want to got the other direction, an 85B is what you use with
tungsten
> film in daylight.  So you could shoot tungsten film or daylight with an
85B.
>
>
> The other option is the series of warming filters that shift the color a
> specific amount.  Fromm lightest to deepest they are 81 81a  81B 81C 81D
> 81EF.
>
>
> Les
>
> > From: John Lakshman <lakshmansweb@sprint.ca>
> > Organization: Lakshman's Web
> > Reply-To: largeformat@f32.net
> > Date: Tue, 16 Jul 2002 16:49:53 -0400
> > To: largeformat@f32.net
> > Subject: [LargeFormat] Tungsten Filter Reverse Use
> >
> > When using tungsten lighting, to remove the yellowish cast, filters are
used.
> > E.g. No. 80A.  I'm trying to find out when such filters can be used in
> > reverse.
> > For example with a natural daylight during sunrise and sunset, the cast
is
> > still
> > yellow/orange but perhaps not as intense as tungsten lit subjects.  If I
used
> > a
> > filter on natural sunlit (sunrise/sunset) subjects, would it render a
blue
> > cast,
> > or a white natural cast?  Anyone attempted this?  Thanks
> >
> > John
> >
> >
> >
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>
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