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- Path: sparky!uunet!gatech!darwin.sura.net!sgiblab!daver!tscs!metran!jay
- From: jay@metran.UUCP (Jay Ts)
- Newsgroups: rec.photo
- Subject: Re: 80A 80B 80C Which filter?
- Message-ID: <344@metran.UUCP>
- Date: 31 Dec 92 03:14:33 GMT
- References: <1hsst0INN3gt@gvgspd.gvg.tek.com>
- Organization: Metran Technology, Tampa, Florida
- Lines: 71
-
- pjs@gvgdsd.GVG.TEK.COM (Peter J. Stonard) writes:
- : I have a couple of questions about colour balance.
- :
- : Given that I am using common daylight balanced C41 print film,
- : and wish to take pictures using available electric light,
- : which blue filter should I use?
-
- If you were using slide film, I would say just forget it, unless you
- want to spend upwards of $700 on a color meter (which still will not
- work well with streetlights) and hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars
- on color correction filters.
-
- You can keep reading to get some idea of why.
-
- : I assume the number 80
- : filter has A,B,C variations to cater for the various color
- : temperatures of different artifical light sources.
-
- The 80[ABC] filters are for converting specific color temperatures
- to daylight (5500K). The 80A is for 3200K tungsten lights, and the
- others are for lights that are even bluer. Note that 3200K is probably
- already bluer than anything that you you are now using as roomlights.
- In other words, if your incandescent bulbs are of the common household
- variety, none of these filters are going to get you to daylight.
-
- : The electric lights are a variety of incadescent bulbs and
- : discharge lights seem in the street.
-
- Streetlights are entirely different. They do not emit a continuous spectrum,
- and do not produce "black body" radiation, as incandescents do. To correct
- for them, you need color correction filters, and a method of determining
- what values to use. The film manufacturer may have data sheets on that,
- or you can use a color meter (which may not work well), and then you will
- have to experiment to get the optimal values.
-
- Now, if you want to *mix* incandescents with streetlights, you've got a
- real problem! Because the correction filtration that works with one will
- NOT work with the other. You can correct for one lightsource or the other,
- or sort of average, but you will still get funny colors, because different
- parts of the scene will be more, or less, lit by each light source.
-
- Give up yet? No? Well, it might be possible to filter the incandescent
- lights to approximate streetlights, and then filter at the camera for that.
-
- : As I may have daylight pictures on the same roll I would like
- : to stick with standard processing and printing, and use the filter(s)
- : when needed. I realise that if all exposures were under the same
- : lighting conditions the printer could correct for the
- : yellowish light.
- :
- : What if I want to combine a long exposure with artifical light,
- : using the blue filter, and add a flash for freezing motion or
- : lighting the subject? Is there a yellow gel that compliments the
- : blue filter, that can be placed over the flash?
-
- Try this: with whatever lighting you have, photograph a grey card (such
- as Kodak Gray Card) and then photograph your subject in the same light.
- When having the negatives printed, tell the printer to filter for the
- grey card in that frame, and use that filter pack for the rest of the
- frames. Since you have the advantage of being able to correct at the
- printmaking stage, you might as well use it!
-
- If your local mall 1 hr. lab cannot handle this, then I suggest you take
- your work to a professional color lab. Get a contact sheet made, and then
- only have the frames you really like enlarged. It may be more expensive
- than the 1 hr lab, but it's A LOT less than the color meter and correction
- filters!
- --
- Jay Ts
- uucp mail: uunet!myrddin!tscs!metran!jay
- phone: (813) 979-9169
-