HaarFager

HaarFager club

Posted: 05 Jun 2022


Taken: 05 Jun 2022

5 favorites     13 comments    73 visits

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Keywords

Digital Photography
Sony Alpha SLT-a77V DSLR
Illinois
Southern Illinois
Norris City
Norris City Illinois
Parks
Kites


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Saturday In The Park

Saturday In The Park
A boy flying his kite at the park. But, it was actually on a Friday. I just like the group Chicago, so I used that title.

xenophora, 4,5 x 6,0, aNNa schramm and 2 other people have particularly liked this photo


13 comments - The latest ones
 Marta Wojtkowska
Marta Wojtkowska club
Nice one :) Nicely composed monochrome and I'd like to see it in B&W!
23 months ago.
HaarFager club has replied to Marta Wojtkowska club
I distincly remember hitting a button in Photoshop that converted the original color image to black and white, so you are seeing it in "B&W." I must be missing something.
23 months ago. Edited 23 months ago.
Marta Wojtkowska club has replied to HaarFager club
It has a distinct sepia tint now.
Maybe you can check the "Embed Color Profile" (an option at the "Save for Web" dialog).
I vaguely remember that I had run into similar issue before I started to use the option for all my web publications, including pure B&W ones.
23 months ago.
HaarFager club has replied to Marta Wojtkowska club
I can't see sepia, either. Is there some sort of problem with a photo if it's "sepia?"
23 months ago.
Marta Wojtkowska club has replied to HaarFager club
Oh! now I remember that you did already tell me about your seeing colors in a different way than an average person would.

Unfortunately computer-generated sepia is a no-no in 'The Black & White" group.
23 months ago.
HaarFager club has replied to Marta Wojtkowska club
Ah, that explains it very nicely. Thank you very much. But I have to ask this: You say "computer-generated sepia is a no-no." Evidently, some old photos acquire this color over time. I can't tell it if they do, but as long as it's not computer-generated sepia, it's all right for the group?
23 months ago. Edited 23 months ago.
Marta Wojtkowska club has replied to HaarFager club
These are hard questions that you ask ;) But you already know it, don't you? ;)

Many old black and white prints turn brown-yellow because of their old age (papers do this after many years of being exposed to light). Some old prints has this sepia toning from the very beginning (because of chemistry used then) and this color can fade or change in many surprising ways.
Some of them can find their way into "The Black & White" group as exceptions. It really depends on how they esthetically fit into the group's general outlook. I am making these decisions individually trying to answer a question: "Does it feel right for the group or not?"
"Not right" usually means a submission under inspection would stand out like a sore point because of the color involved.
I am not able to give you exact measures behind those decisions, but let me think about them. Give me some time. I'll be back with some other answers, I promise!
23 months ago.
HaarFager club has replied to Marta Wojtkowska club
That makes the most sense. You use your heart to judge what is right for the group. I can certainly understand and respect that. Thanks!
23 months ago.
 Marta Wojtkowska
Marta Wojtkowska club
I can't download your picture to check its metadata so I made this comparison of what is now on my screen:

sitp
23 months ago.
HaarFager club has replied to Marta Wojtkowska club
What does your comparison tell you? Could you tell me, please? They both look the same to me. (But, then I can't see correctly, so I may be missing your point.)
23 months ago.
Marta Wojtkowska club has replied to HaarFager club
Give me some time, I am looking for the best tool for you to 'see' the difference for yourself.
23 months ago.
Marta Wojtkowska club has replied to HaarFager club
Try this:

1. make a screenshot of the part of the screen with my sample,
2. load it into your Photoshop,
3. find the Color Picker or the Eyedropper Tool (it may be called differently in your version of PS, that I don't know),
4. hoover (or click) the tool over different areas of the sample (your pic),
5 observe RGB numbers in different spots of your pic.

With pure B&W RGB components should by uniformly equal to each other.
Your pic gives me reading like:
204,153,153 (sky),
107,102,98 (boy's shirt),
100,96,93 (grass).
That results in the sepia tint.
23 months ago.

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