To The Edge Of Darkness

Rob MacKillop

Edinburgh Correspondent
Last edited:
An excellent suggestion I think too. Works superbly and overall I like the dark tones and quite high contrast. I also like 'One Morning' and 'Night Bridge' very much. The former for the shafts of light and the way the shadows reach towards the lady and her dog. The latter for the sense that something is being revealed by the dramatic light.
 
Love the inky blackness of the water in Dark Bridge1 Rob

I don't think I put enough black in my images - based on what I like in other people's work

Something to try I think - liking where you're going with this
 
great tones, it adds a lot of suspense to the photos. everyone's just waiting for the other shoe to drop, or the monster nobody speaks about is going to make his yearly trip out of the forest to grab some children.
 
Shoe to drop? I'm missing that cultural reference, Beth. But the comments are fun.

Chris, I too like the inky blackness. I'm wondering if it came about by the happy accident of underexposing the shots, then working hard in Raw and Levels to recover something. I've never managed to get that black before.

Also, I had the orange filter on (this time with black and white film!) but the camera was set to auto expose. Does a filter effect the AE calculation within the camera? Should I be compensating for using a filter?
 
Also, I had the orange filter on (this time with black and white film!) but the camera was set to auto expose. Does a filter effect the AE calculation within the camera? Should I be compensating for using a filter?

A TTL meter should automatically compensate for the presence of the filter as it measure the light passing through the lens. The colour can have a small effect depending in how the meter cell works but it is not usually significant. Similarly, the sensitivity of the film will vary but, again, it shouldn't be significant. Can you check your camera against a hand-held meter? Don't forget to either remove the filter or correct the hand-held reading for the filter factor (this should be shown on the side of the filter).

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Filter_factor
 
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