Unlock the Secrets of Pro Level Black and White Photos!

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  • เผยแพร่เมื่อ 14 ก.ค. 2024
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    In this video, we explore the timeless art of black and white photography. Learn tips and techniques for creating stunning monochrome images that capture emotion and drama. From exploring contrast to simplifying with grayscale, we'll show you how to master the power of monochrome. Whether you're a beginner or an experienced photographer, this video will help you create classic and elegant images that stand the test of time. Join us on this journey into the world of black and white photography.
    Thanks again to Frames Magazine - readframes.com/
    Coupon - tpe10 - gives 10% recurring discount on both yearly and monthly subscription plans.
    00:00 - Black and White Photography Tips
    00:23 - Exclusively Black and White photography
    00:47 - Exposing in Black and white photography
    02:23 - Use RAW for Black and White Photography
    03:08 - Abstract works great in black and white photography
    05:02 - Using contrast in black and white photography
    07:10 - Black and white photography experts
    10:28 - Getting feet wet in black and white photography
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ความคิดเห็น • 174

  • @warrend8362
    @warrend8362 ปีที่แล้ว +34

    This could become the beginning of a series that might help people with their black and white, since I see a lot of gray and white photography 😉

    • @karlbratby4349
      @karlbratby4349 ปีที่แล้ว +6

      Agree, todays photographers are scared of deep blacks and bright whites, they are taught must have detail on every tone… boring 😂

    • @valdiskrebs566
      @valdiskrebs566 ปีที่แล้ว +4

      @@karlbratby4349 Agree, but many people don't know the difference between "bright whites" and "blown highlights"

    • @creative_cozmic
      @creative_cozmic ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@karlbratby4349 I love to use contrast in my B&W images and often use deep black to deliberately remove unimportant detail and for dramatic effect.

    • @creative_cozmic
      @creative_cozmic ปีที่แล้ว +2

      @@valdiskrebs566 The Exposure warning tool in software is a great help for blown highlights. Saying that, I did deliberately let the sky go overblown on a B&W image I took late last year in the fog at a local park. Correcting the exposure just made the sky look a dull grey that wasn't at all pleasing and took away any contrasting white colour from the image. There was nothing to see in the sky anyway, thanks to the fog.

    • @petervanorsouw2858
      @petervanorsouw2858 ปีที่แล้ว

      It is so good that you mention FILM, I started out in the nineteen seventies shooting transparencies "Ektachrome" that's where I learned about contrast, B&W film and printing it can be very rewarding.

  • @toine1915
    @toine1915 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Thank you very much, Alex.
    B&W will stay forever it is too powerful.
    Really stunning video, man.
    Antoine.

  • @DI-cm5xc
    @DI-cm5xc ปีที่แล้ว +16

    Great stuff Alex, thanks. My suggestion to students (long retired from teaching) would be if you are using a mirrorless camera for a B&W assignment, don't set the viewfinder to monochrome. Maybe set a custom button to switch to B&W, but try and visualize the color scene as B&W in your mind. Only then take a peek at the monochrome screen and see how your interpretation was. No doubt a much quicker way to learn to "see" in B&W than the way us older photographers learned with film. Of course, you can use this same comparison process with a RAW image in post, but I believe it would be a more effective learning tool if applied first in the field.

  • @bartoszpajak2285
    @bartoszpajak2285 ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I recently started to shoot film again and I decided to go for black and white exclusively. There’s something special about the look of b/w photographs. The process of loading the film, taking the photographs, developing the film and printing the photographs in the darkroom, all by myself, is another, very important and highly rewarding aspect.

  • @chilecayenne
    @chilecayenne ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Ever since I bought my M10M camera....I see the world in a different way.
    I've also been now shooting B&W medium format film...and oh goodness.....I love photography!!!
    Paul Simon got it WRONG....the world looks better in black and white!!
    ;)

  • @cmichaelhaugh8517
    @cmichaelhaugh8517 ปีที่แล้ว

    Clearly I don’t do enough B&W. More of this please.

  • @bondgabebond4907
    @bondgabebond4907 8 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

    You hit on the one word that should be employed when photographing in B&W, and that is to 'play.' Yep, you will come up with some interesting stuff if you ignore all the rules and just play around.
    This should also be a cue to those interested in B&W photography to buy a good used film camera and film. Get a tank, chemicals and go the whole route in developing film to printing pictures, or as I do now, made high-res scans of my negatives. Have to preserve as much of the grain effect and not let the digital image degrade the picture. Years ago I did the whole thing with others at a hobby shop darkroom. Talk about fun.
    Of course, study the pictures of as many photographers as possible to get ideas. We all borrow, so why not borrow the techniques of the greats of yesteryear and start making masterpieces of your work.
    To those interested in B&W photography using film instead of digital, the camera is the least of your problems. But you will get the results better using film, not trying to replicate the image in digital. As they are two different mediums, they look different. Grain is more random with all those dots on film. Digital is linear, pixels all in a row. Plus, using a film camera will give you a feel of how the process works. Advance the film, focus, adjust exposure, then press the shutter button. Up goes the mirror, the shutter opens and closes and down goes the mirror. Suggestions for cameras in the old SLR world would include the Pentax Spotmatic F, Nikon F2 or FM or FE, Canon FTB or F1, Olympus OM-1 or it's variants. But the idea is to get to the root of B&W photography, and that was film. What is great about these cameras is that you have total control over its operation. They are simple and that is why they are magic.

  • @anthonygarbo8114
    @anthonygarbo8114 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great discussion . . . Black and White has been my favorite since is was in my late teens . . . thanks.

  • @christianpetersen1782
    @christianpetersen1782 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks Alex, another excellent video. It’s very inspirational. Thanks so much.

  • @autisticlife
    @autisticlife ปีที่แล้ว +2

    It took a digital camera to get me in to monochrome photography, its electronic viewfinder gave me an idea of what I would get. Until then I saw colour in a viewfinder and could not concieve what a monochrome immage would be. Now I shoot lots of monochrome. My favourite monochrome camera is an early Canon Sure Shot with exposure control via the iso dial. I use its 38mm lens to make intimate and environmental portraits of my family. I would love a video on black and wite development and printing.

  • @danielscheerer3032
    @danielscheerer3032 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    All I can say is I love my Q2mono. True black and white photography in digital form. Can only use light for adjusting, not color. Wonderful. Great video - thanks!

    • @mgscheue
      @mgscheue 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

      Enjoying mine so much.

  • @eirikkittelsen9787
    @eirikkittelsen9787 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I completely agree. Black and White photography is inherently abstract as we don't really see with the absence of color. I shoot 90% BW and therefor i went the route of the Leica M10 monochrom, and love the experience. Great video 😃👍🏻👍🏻

  • @grainificent
    @grainificent ปีที่แล้ว

    amazing video! I love black and white photography, especially on film! that ghost is truly amazing! Love the symmetry and solid blacks in many of them photos. I did have to save this video to rewatch again later.

  • @VictorReynolds
    @VictorReynolds ปีที่แล้ว +10

    I shoot a lot in black and white. Like you I started in black and white film photography. Black and white still has a drama that color cannot touch. Thank for another inspiring video Alex!

  • @mariannestellin2100
    @mariannestellin2100 ปีที่แล้ว

    I love listening to you 🙏☀️

  • @spaceman77777
    @spaceman77777 ปีที่แล้ว

    Some of my favorite photographs have a slight resemblance to charcoal sketches or oil paintings. I love the abstraction from a real life photograph.

  • @TheSilverprint
    @TheSilverprint ปีที่แล้ว

    Shoot film. Magic

  • @nelsono4315
    @nelsono4315 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    after years of shooting digital, which I still do, I have gotten back into film photography and I have gravitated towards black and white with film. I have always loved B&W. When it is done well it is unbeatable. Thanks for the video!

  • @jamesoliver6625
    @jamesoliver6625 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    The Mencher image of the mountain and the fellow in the skif is made, to me, by the burned in vignette that shapes the "window of observation." Without that it becomes an entirely different image much like the too many misty morning images of a scene in nature flooding the internet these days. Having paid my way through school back in the early 70s by doing custom darkroom work (color & b/w) it brought back a lot of memories. IMO, you don't see light until you've worked in b/w.

  • @Rob.1340
    @Rob.1340 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you. All the best. 👍📷😎

  • @JohnDrummondPhoto
    @JohnDrummondPhoto ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Monochrome photography is all about luminosity and contrast. I find I can visualize those factors best by removing my glasses (In very nearsighted) and really squinting. That minimizes the impact of color and details, and emphasizes how I see shapes, light, and shadow. I'm producing many more monochrome images than I used to, and I can get very dramatic images that way.

  • @seaeagles6025
    @seaeagles6025 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I enjoyed this video i sometimes shoot Monochrome of old buildings, and with colour old buildings don't look good. Thanks Alex.

  • @alvinbirdi6502
    @alvinbirdi6502 ปีที่แล้ว +5

    This is such a great channel. I love the content and your passion for the topics you talk about! Many thanks.

  • @creative_cozmic
    @creative_cozmic ปีที่แล้ว +2

    I would never use a B&W image as is straight out of camera. I use a Sony and it doesn't even have a decent B&W style preset anyway. The ability to shape the image in the software I use is a hugely important part of my workflow. I really like dramatic B&W images, much like those of Trent Parke and having the ability to deliberately underexpose blacks and overexpose whites where I feel necessary is a great advantage to B&W imagery.

  • @Youssefbensaoud
    @Youssefbensaoud ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I’ve seen many of your TH-cam videos that I really liked
    very interesting academically rich
    Bravo and good luck

  • @wernerrauwerdink8554
    @wernerrauwerdink8554 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you for this video. There are a few Belgian black and white photographers who are definitely worth paying attention to, Dirk Braeckman and Stefan Vanfleteren.

  • @valpasquier2570
    @valpasquier2570 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you Alex

  • @jasongood9413
    @jasongood9413 ปีที่แล้ว

    Love black and white. Especially portraits think it brings the emotions out more

  • @esandler99
    @esandler99 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I started to photopraph one year ago with a mirrorless camera and luckily i´m still into it (which isn´t normal for me). I definitely had a lot of fun so far trying new things out and just learning without really studying much and so far i´ve invested a bit into the system. However... half a year into it i had the idea of buying an old mechanical film camera and now i ended up in a situation, where i barely even touch my modern expensive camera and just go out with my screwmount leica in the pocket and shoot blurry images. But somehow it just feels right to me. I´ve watched several photography youtubers at the beginning (mainly technical stuff) , but today this channel is pretty much the only one i keep watching. I just wanted to say "Thank You!" for the great and interesting videos. Right now i´m on my first b/w film so this video came perfectly.

    • @arneheeringa96
      @arneheeringa96 ปีที่แล้ว

      Screw mount Leicas are getting more expensive too. You can make very sharp pics with them, just see what Henri Cartier-Bresson did. He used them and a 50mm lens. And developing film and print is so much fun!

  • @DavidLeeWedDJ
    @DavidLeeWedDJ ปีที่แล้ว +4

    I shoot a lot fo B/W and I agree about it more forgiving but as i find that as there is 'less to the image' the image itself has to be better or speak to you more. Just like to continue to give praise as I always feel I've learnt something from your lessons. Keep it up (y)

  • @TheHamNinja
    @TheHamNinja 6 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thanks for doing this video. It inspires, reinforces, and enlarges the envelope for what I am pursuing. My work is not going to set the world on fire but I does help deepen my appreciation of other photographers.

  • @main4tube
    @main4tube ปีที่แล้ว

    You are such a good teacher. A very good and talented speaker.

  • @dormaker
    @dormaker ปีที่แล้ว +4

    Thank you Alex , really enjoy your content and the time and effort put into each video , the images and photographers featured always leaves me with a head full of new ideas

  • @ivanm.krsticevic1535
    @ivanm.krsticevic1535 ปีที่แล้ว

    I love this channel so much. Always thoughtful and engaging lectures. If you did more on black and white, including analogue, i would love to see it!

  • @CostaMesaPhotography
    @CostaMesaPhotography ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Excellent video, let me start with that. Clearly the classic understanding of B&W white photography is that absent color, the other elements of composition, shapes, lighting, etc must carry the day for the image to be successful. You mention that film photography is more forgiving, but I was a little unclear exactly how you meant that, particularly when my experience with both suggests that the power and technology of today's cameras, particularly with regard to dynamic range allows for improperly exposed images to be salvageable whereas a B&W film exposure can be lost and/or extremely difficult to salvage.
    That said, there is something else which I feel give B&W film photography an advantage when it comes to achieving what we've come to accept as classically stunning images. And that advantage is greater contrast. I think that an image captured with a modern digital camera, while being able to be converted to monochrome, will have such wonderful (subjective) dynamic range that the drama of higher contrast must be achieved in post more often than not, while a B&W film image starting out with less dynamic range gets to that final higher contrast finish faster...and maybe even straight out of camera.
    I'd be interested in your thoughts on this?

  • @zeleniumstudio4848
    @zeleniumstudio4848 ปีที่แล้ว

    Love it!

  • @jbliborio
    @jbliborio ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I started enjoying black and white photograph through going back to film photography. Brought myself a Nikon F4S and started selecting the stocks I like most. It's such a challenge and joy deal with this way of doing what I like most. Still sending my films to develop but I hope doing all the process myself soon.

    • @arneheeringa96
      @arneheeringa96 ปีที่แล้ว

      Developing is so much fun 😊

    • @jbliborio
      @jbliborio ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@arneheeringa96 Sure!!! Just need to adapt a place to do it.

  • @flyingrhinofilms
    @flyingrhinofilms ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks Alex, great advice and tips 👌

  • @ebrahimfaiz8522
    @ebrahimfaiz8522 ปีที่แล้ว

    It was inspiring as your other videos were. Thanks.

  • @badger67
    @badger67 ปีที่แล้ว

    It's my absolute joy Alex, thank you.
    I'm off to watch your recommended video.

  • @Stefannlee
    @Stefannlee ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for the content! Love your philosophy and approach on the subject..

  • @jccarty1477
    @jccarty1477 ปีที่แล้ว

    LOVE ALL OF THIS MR ALEX. KEEP EM COMING.

  • @timothydalton8023
    @timothydalton8023 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    Thank you Alex. Your presentations are ALL good but as B & W is my favorite medium in photography, I really enjoyed this one. I also think your suggestion to try film was beneficial in that it reminds me to “get back into my photographic roots.” I love digital but at heart, I’m an analog kind of photographer. Thanks again!

  • @rhonaldjr
    @rhonaldjr ปีที่แล้ว

    Photographing the prairies in Canadian winter - I start embracing black & white and I love it now. An excellent episode as always, thank you for the tips. Now I am impressed to visit Canadian Rockies famous spots this summer and photograph them in black and white.

  • @heinzhagenbucher4714
    @heinzhagenbucher4714 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Was a bit late, but will watch it again, since I love b&w (unbunt)
    Thank you so much Alex

  • @byronalpers4972
    @byronalpers4972 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks for this exceptional,video.

  • @michaeloconnell9259
    @michaeloconnell9259 ปีที่แล้ว

    I cut my photographic teeth on black and white photography in high school photography class. I still have an affinity for it. I truly enjoy your videos.

  • @entestare4805
    @entestare4805 ปีที่แล้ว

    Best videos ever. Great work, please keep up :)

  • @ericlahra8373
    @ericlahra8373 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you Alex, very inspirational as always.

  • @thethirdman225
    @thethirdman225 ปีที่แล้ว

    This links well with your video about Bob Carlos Clarke. I love his B&W stuff since I saw that.

  • @david_allen1
    @david_allen1 ปีที่แล้ว

    Fascinating topic! Although I haven't always appreciated B&W photography, after many years of color photography, I find myself much more interested in B&W photography, especially for the winter months, where there isn't so much color in nature (which is mainly what I photograph). I find your discourse thought provoking and refreshing as there is no gear conversation, which is a relief, but more discussion about the passion of photography, the art of photography and how to realize on digital film images that are inviting and evocative. When I first began photography, my goal was realism -- to make my images realistically reflect the subject of the image. But when I looked at the results, the images lacked the emotional impact that I felt which inspired me to take the photo. It was then that I realized that my real goal is to make the viewer of my images experience the same emotional impact that I felt when I saw the subjects in my images. That has liberated my view of photography and transformed the images that I create.

  • @AdamJonesPhoto
    @AdamJonesPhoto ปีที่แล้ว

    Another great and truly inspiring video Alex. Excellent production and content.

  • @johnclay7644
    @johnclay7644 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Very informative 14mins (incl the raw side of mirrorless) works for many genres. good mono (Photography experts) sections too.

  • @supersingular
    @supersingular ปีที่แล้ว

    Min 10:00 it’s the deepest thought about why monochrome photography still has and will continue to have a very important place in art. Alex; Thank you ever so much for the incredibly valuable insights.

  • @SteamfanScott
    @SteamfanScott ปีที่แล้ว +2

    Yes, a series on black and white film photography processes including developing the film would be much appreciated. I’ve been learning my father’s Nikon F, and this video has inspired me to purchase my first two rolls of B&W film. It is somewhat cheaper too, so may feel more liberties to explore with the film settings.
    I have been considering buying a tank and accessories to develop my own film, but just hesitant about the process.

    • @zippywalker6406
      @zippywalker6406 ปีที่แล้ว

      Give it a try. It's very easy but yet it can be as nuanced as you want to make it.

    • @canturgan
      @canturgan ปีที่แล้ว

      Processing black and white doesn't need much gear or skills. Colour is another story. When you produce a processed roll of negs you'll be hooked.

    • @arneheeringa96
      @arneheeringa96 ปีที่แล้ว

      Developing is so much fun 😊

  • @joncaradies3155
    @joncaradies3155 7 หลายเดือนก่อน

    One line stood out very large for me .......' If this was in color , it would be all about the color and not the shape '. (or form ) ......

  • @DeeB1345
    @DeeB1345 ปีที่แล้ว

    This sounds like an ad for HP5! Love the video as always

  • @jimgilligan4115
    @jimgilligan4115 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks

  • @Martin_Siegel
    @Martin_Siegel ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I love shooting B&W film but do it far too less, mainly because I'm afraid of developing. I have all the stuff but more often than not I'm scared of trying. I know it's an acquired skill and with doing it I will become more confident I think I have to leave my comfort zone (or keep depending on lab processing which might harm my my will to try out things).

  • @mhill2510
    @mhill2510 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thanks!

  • @grandpascuba
    @grandpascuba ปีที่แล้ว

    If you want to try black and white photography, and don’t want to buy all the equipment just to experiment. Then look around your town for a photo school or a community college that teaches photography and ask to use their equipment. You may have to sign up for a workshop or a class. But you will be able to have a fully working dark room in which to try doing black and white. In the town where I used to live, they had a photo school that would teach these short introductory seminars on weekends. And when the seminar was finished, you were allowed to work in their darkroom for the rest of the day.

  • @lucian5194
    @lucian5194 ปีที่แล้ว

    Since I started taking photos in 2019 I never shot anything in black and white ( maybe I just added a BNW filter to a photo now and then) until last summer a friend of mine came to see me and we went out shooting, and he was shooting in BNW directly , so he convinced me to try it and I kind of fell in love with it. So many photos that didn't look good in color look so so good in black and white.

  • @jonathanman6395
    @jonathanman6395 ปีที่แล้ว

    Keep the B&W videos coming please

  • @c.augustin
    @c.augustin ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I find C-41 color negative development even easier than B&W, because there are no variables (other than temperature, and this can be controlled quite easily, just look at what CineStill has to offer), and there's even a B&W film available for C-41 - Ilford XP2 Super. There was Kodak BW400CN, but Kodak has discontinued it a long time ago (I would prefer it to XP2, as it had better "color rendering" and better contrast). Classical B&W is cheaper, though.

  • @oneeyedphotographer
    @oneeyedphotographer ปีที่แล้ว

    "It looks like it's Australian." Probably it is. I stopped and Googled Ray Harris and found "The Blue Bin." The post is dated April two years ago, he's living in Ballarat, Victoria. I note is talks about FRAMES Magazine.
    I do buildings, regularly black and white. Christian Fletcher also does Buildings. mostly in colour. Not necessarily in the original colour.

  • @Batteristafoto
    @Batteristafoto ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video bro!

  • @maciejrogfishing469
    @maciejrogfishing469 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you for your videos. You are truly inspiring me. Im doin photography for year and all my followers told me that i've made huge step forward. Its all thanks to you.

  • @johnmitchell6919
    @johnmitchell6919 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    I adore B&W but have never been good at seeing in B&W when out in the world. I have been using mirrorless to improve my vision. I look at something and then use the evf to confirm/reject my assessment which has improved my keeper rate. Still room to improve but enjoying the learning curve immensely.
    Thanks for the video and the ideas to be more experimental/less technical.

  • @b991228
    @b991228 ปีที่แล้ว

    The stark nature of black & white forces the artist and viewer to stop and not just scan through the whole picture but instead implores you to see the parts. Those small parts are then brought to our attention because the minimal dualist nature of the medium. Allows you to see Fan Ho.

  • @thepedlingprophet
    @thepedlingprophet ปีที่แล้ว

    Hi Alex, I am just returning to photography after a few years focussed on the day job. Thank you for this it has been a gentle, light bulb moment. Looking forward to exploring organic and inorganic interfaces on my Dartmoor home

  • @Daniel_Ilyich
    @Daniel_Ilyich 8 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Alex, I think you are talking about the figure-to-ground relationship when you are referring to contrast? That can be achieved in color, just as effectively. You need sufficient contrast in tone. Light against dark, or dark against light. With color, you can also play with color contrasts. However, I do agree that black and white gives you greater latitude to play with lights and shadows. I'm a black and white man, myself...btw. I'm just making a case that color photography can fulfill all of the same things.

  • @paulmstuart
    @paulmstuart ปีที่แล้ว

    Another masterful video from you Alex. Thank you so much. Also, thank you for sharing more of your work. No need for imposter syndrome here. Your work is exceptional. Cheers.

  • @grenadagreengroupg3776
    @grenadagreengroupg3776 ปีที่แล้ว

    I could write an essay, Alex. Let me reduce it to three words. Heartfelt thank you.

  • @vedarius
    @vedarius ปีที่แล้ว +6

    Dear Alex! Thank you so much for this video! Like many people who watch your channel, I started at the time of film photography. So, I know by my own experience what alchemy of the “wet process” is. And that darkroom atmosphere! Nothing can compare to it. Which does not mean that I’m nostalgic (albeit a little) to the point of rejecting modern technology. Not at all! New tech gives us new ways to achieve results, both pre-planned and unexpected. As for B&W photography, I usually try to imagine how a scene would look in B&W, but shoot full-color RAW. No need to explain what freedom of “processing” this gives. Though shooting deliberately in B&W is a good practice too. We can say, that modern ways to take and make images give different people more opportunities to adjust the whole process to their individual preferences, making it more obvious that key factor in photography as an art is the creative mood and mindset of the photographer. And nothing stimulates our creativity more than watching what other creators are doing. So, my special thanks to you for using the highest class photos for your videos. They are so inspirational! The same for the ideas about photography, here the B&W one, that you share in your videos. They may be something new for some, or well-known for others, but in both cases it is important to discuss things that make photography be an art, and not just a routine of pointing and shooting, as any computerized outdoor cam can do. So, many thanks again both for this video and for all your efforts to maintain creative approach to photography!

    • @arneheeringa96
      @arneheeringa96 ปีที่แล้ว

      Isn't RAW always colour that should be processed in BW? So you could easily set your display to BW. I am not certain though as I still shoot BW on Film and Colour in Digital C41 (SOOC).

    • @vedarius
      @vedarius ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@arneheeringa96 Yes, it is. I shoot full color to have more choices at when I make B&W conversion. I just like the process of image processing in digital workflow. And there are images that turn out to have more impact in low saturation style, rather than in pure monochrome. In other words, I prefer to reserve more room for improvisation in post.

    • @arneheeringa96
      @arneheeringa96 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@vedarius Great!

  • @silvestersze9968
    @silvestersze9968 ปีที่แล้ว

    I guess we had done similar things in schools… hand processed everything… from expose, develop and print

  • @reinhartreuschel5499
    @reinhartreuschel5499 11 หลายเดือนก่อน

    Thank you for this delighting video! It's o.k. with the denotation 'black&white', albeit we are confronted with a widespread range of lightness and shades of grey within a semantic differential between pure black and pure white. Or - at 11:18 (Muse Portraits) in this video - shades of monochrome brown tones which isn't 'black&white'. Therefore we know the tags 'panchromatic' and 'orthochromatic', and we can get panchromatic film and orthochromatic film - the latter enhances much more contrast. For instance I know Agfapan film and Agfaortho film; Agfaortho25 has very fine grain with 25 ASA. Older film cameras like my Pentax Spotmatic show on their dialplate 'COLOR' respectively 'PANCHRO'. With digicams we can create monochrome pictures showing only one colour, such as brown oder blue or green or ... So we get at least effects looking nearly like B&W, but they are monochrome in another colour. Excuse my 'Asperger' way of differentiation;-)))

  • @MoD_Master_Of_Disaster_
    @MoD_Master_Of_Disaster_ ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hi Alex, this is the 2nd video I viewed on your channel and I subscribed immediately.
    If you would pour this kind and quality of information into a 3 day workshop, I'd signup in a minute.
    It would be the first workshop where one wouldn't need a camera, yet it would teach people far more than when visiting a week of point 'n shoot workshop.
    Take care.

    • @ThePhotographicEye
      @ThePhotographicEye  ปีที่แล้ว

      That’s awesome. Thank you

    • @arneheeringa96
      @arneheeringa96 ปีที่แล้ว

      Yeah it's in fact photo critique which is indispensable if you want to become a good photographer. All workshops in the old days used to do this after picture taking. Or as Daniel Milnor said working with a photo editor was like this in an extreme way. Unfortunately there aren't many photoeditors left. You could check out Dan's TH-cam channel as well if you like .

  • @andrewharvey8638
    @andrewharvey8638 ปีที่แล้ว

    Another great video Alex, I tend to edit my photos I like and then copy them into my smartphone, I was having a look at them after watching you video and edited quite a few on the phone into black and white and I was surprised how many were actually a lot stronger image then in colour, and that when I first edited them never gave black and white a thought, or just couldn't see it at the time?

  • @karlbratby4349
    @karlbratby4349 ปีที่แล้ว

    I too spent two years shooting solely black and white hand rolled film whilst doing my city and guilds in the late 1980’s … wow that makes me sound really old

  • @chrisfowler7669
    @chrisfowler7669 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Thanks as always, Alex! I'm remembering that some photographers--landscape photographers in particular--resist including people in their pictures because that's immediately where the viewer's eye goes; it becomes, if not the focus, at least the "reference point" for the picture. And I'm wondering if, in some similar way, incorporating color is the same way. It becomes the thing you have to deal with, regardless of whatever else is going on in the image. Just a thought...

    • @arneheeringa96
      @arneheeringa96 ปีที่แล้ว

      Think you're right. BW is about contrast, shapes and framing. Colour can be distractive, but can also be beautiful when monochromatic or popping.

  • @davecarrera
    @davecarrera ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Right now I meke my own developers for film and paper. FX-55 and E-72 for paper. Close to nailing my film stock and FX-55 pairing that gives me negatives that I can bend and shape under the enlarger. A challange, oh yes indeedy, but for me great fun.

    • @arneheeringa96
      @arneheeringa96 ปีที่แล้ว

      Seems you have been watching 'The Pictorial Planet' TH-cam channel, because he talks about those developers. BTTB Mod is a great film developer too to mix yourself. Check out Rüdiger Hartungs blog about it.

    • @davecarrera
      @davecarrera ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@arneheeringa96 Watching, Bought Johns book and all the chemicals to make FX-55, BTTB and E-72 at home. Sharing my experience as I travel this path in photography.

    • @arneheeringa96
      @arneheeringa96 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@davecarrera he's doing a great job. I make beer and wine developers from scratch as I kept experimenting after dabbling with Caffenol.

    • @davecarrera
      @davecarrera ปีที่แล้ว +1

      @@arneheeringa96 John is also generous with his offline encouragement also. Top chap.

    • @arneheeringa96
      @arneheeringa96 ปีที่แล้ว

      @@davecarrera yeah I wrote with him a bit. Would be nice to visit him if I ever get the chance.

  • @GarryKnight
    @GarryKnight ปีที่แล้ว

    All of that work by Eric Mencher looks like it was shot using the Hipstamatic app on an iPhone. However he did it, he's a total expert in the field.

  • @ianiles6430
    @ianiles6430 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Aperture ... Those were the days. I loved it, but unfortunately, Apple discontinued it.

    • @steveh8658
      @steveh8658 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      FYI. The people that made Aperture for Apple have gone on to make the "RAW Power" program for mac.

  • @canturgan
    @canturgan ปีที่แล้ว

    I had a lab process and contact yesterday, £30. Plus the film. That's me finished with film.

    • @arneheeringa96
      @arneheeringa96 ปีที่แล้ว

      Colour? Probably a pro lab. I only used big commercial labs and they deliver shitty scans and shitty prints for like 20 years now. If lab I only let them process colour negatives/slides and nothing else. Keeps costs low too. Everything BW I do myself, which is so much more fun than sitting behind a computer screen.

  • @ActualCounterfactual
    @ActualCounterfactual ปีที่แล้ว

    I miss the days of Tri-X and Rodinal + Ilford Multigrade...... standing in the dark meditating on life.....

    • @arneheeringa96
      @arneheeringa96 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      All still available, so why not? I do. Developing and printing is so much more fun than sitting at a computer screen.

  • @nickknight2095
    @nickknight2095 ปีที่แล้ว

    Great video, thanks! Alex, do you by any chance do Zoom talks to photo clubs? I’m putting together a programme for my club’s next season and it would be great if you could give us a talk please? 😊

    • @ThePhotographicEye
      @ThePhotographicEye  ปีที่แล้ว

      Hi Nick,
      Yes, I do talks for clubs.
      Please drop me a line - alex@thephotographiceye.info

  • @tonyperez5360
    @tonyperez5360 ปีที่แล้ว

    Thank you so much for all you do your channel so good I relate. To you I too have been in photography for so many years professionally assigned in Hollywood staff photographer aero space Honeywell I’ve done so much darkroom Hughes Aircraft I went to Los Angels tech photography
    If you get chance look up Famous Photographer School I have their books so cool any keep doing what you do please to much to write ✌️

    • @ThePhotographicEye
      @ThePhotographicEye  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      Oh man, I would love to have a set of those books. I have heard of them before but struggled to find any copies of the course

  • @dougdavis5808
    @dougdavis5808 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Hi I love this video 📸 I do have a question I shoot with a Canon 90 D and when I open the raw file up it goes to color any ideas why? Keep up the great work🙏

    • @barret8
      @barret8 ปีที่แล้ว +1

      it's because raw = raw data from camera sensor = colour image (with exception of leica monochrome maybe)

    • @creative_cozmic
      @creative_cozmic ปีที่แล้ว

      You need to convert it to black and white in the editing software you use.

    • @curiousabout1
      @curiousabout1 ปีที่แล้ว

      Like barret8 said. Raw only means that it's raw, unprocessed data. When you don't shoot in raw, the camera processes that data for you using it's own software. Raw lets you choose the software and how you would like the data to look, instead of whoever made the camera.

  • @denislaroche3957
    @denislaroche3957 ปีที่แล้ว

    I spent last year shooting only black and white, I continue to shoot b&w about 75% and started color again : I am a better color photographer now.... also consider FAN HO the great b&w photographer

    • @denislaroche3957
      @denislaroche3957 ปีที่แล้ว

      th-cam.com/video/WToUHtahvE8/w-d-xo.html

  • @ohstanley3058
    @ohstanley3058 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    Trent park is brilliant. Leica are foolish not having him as ambassador or as the face of their M cameras.

  • @jimruppel476
    @jimruppel476 ปีที่แล้ว

    So many triangles in Returning Home.

  • @colinwaylett9122
    @colinwaylett9122 ปีที่แล้ว

    I would like to see a vídeo on how to procesos black and white film. A while ago l took a roll of black and white film to be developed and printed but the price was prohivitive compared to digital.

    • @veivoli
      @veivoli ปีที่แล้ว

      Try searching TH-cam. There are many videos out there...
      Going against my principle of not giving people the answer but encouraging them to seek for themselves 🙂 try this from Ilford:
      th-cam.com/video/aPQ7OPy8T2w/w-d-xo.html
      You will need some equipment - developing tank, daylight changing bag unless you have a darkroom, measuring cylinders, thermometer, plus the chemicals. Ilford has a very nice starter kit, but I tend to buy larger quantities. I suppose I have been an Ilford fanboy, for much longer than that term has been in use, as I've been using their film and paper, plus chemicals, since the late 60s. With a break of several years, but I have been drawn back.
      It's a fairly simple and straightforward process and I find it quite rewarding. The biggest problem I have is dust settling on the negatives as they dry!
      Currently I scan my negatives, but we intend to build a darkroom as a couple of my grandkids are keen to learn more.
      I'm sorry that that was a long and rambling answer to a simple question, but you triggered one of my passions.
      And I do have and use a digital camera as well!

  • @L3ON360Z
    @L3ON360Z ปีที่แล้ว

    Are the Acros film simulations Fujifilm good or is it better to manually make RAWs black& white in post?

    • @GJSsongsmith
      @GJSsongsmith ปีที่แล้ว

      I love that film sim in my Fuji camera . Have got some of my best shots with it . Barely need to tweak it in post

    • @ThePhotographicEye
      @ThePhotographicEye  ปีที่แล้ว +1

      If you are learning to work in BW I would suggest doing it manually as then you get a better understanding how you arrive at the black and white image

  • @karlx19
    @karlx19 ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I love how some people think that ‘straight out of the camera’ is some kind of badge of honour.

  • @petercastell4450
    @petercastell4450 ปีที่แล้ว +1

    If colour had been invented first would anyone bothered inventing B&W ? would it have been considered a wonderful advancement I think it very doubtful, and why didn't the old masters paint in B&W. I occasionally convert a photo to B&W usually to hide some thing, if you are using film it is of course cheaper

  • @RogerBays
    @RogerBays ปีที่แล้ว +3

    I am a fan of bw and colour and use both in my own work. But I sometimes wonder how bw would be regarded if the history of photography had been different. Imagine for example if bw film had never been invented, and the first and only film ever made was colour. Would we now regard bw as profoundly interesting or just a trivial/novelty digital Photo manipulation effect? Of course history is in the bag, so we will never know.

    • @mgscheue
      @mgscheue 7 หลายเดือนก่อน +1

      I’ve thought of that, too. I have to imagine photography would have begun with color, had the technology been there from the beginning.

  • @silvestersze9968
    @silvestersze9968 ปีที่แล้ว

    I’m wondering why just monochrome is your favorite? Don’t you think color photography also has its own uniqueness just curious?!… 😂
    I like both. But would like to hear what you have to say.

  • @uwestolten1503
    @uwestolten1503 ปีที่แล้ว

    alex I learned that for me is alwais very wise to call up your channel and getting the most out of your themes . Today it was this: black and white images .. fotos ..
    are so forgiving and the same time so unforgiving... thats ecxacltly what it is... you hit thail on the head here..

  • @oneeyedphotographer
    @oneeyedphotographer ปีที่แล้ว

    5:38 I am sure you mean simple. Simplistic is not complimentary.

  • @grandpascuba
    @grandpascuba ปีที่แล้ว

    The portrait of the girl that you used at the beginning of the video, is exquisite. You may have gotten bored with portrait photography, but that image anything but boring.