[rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
- From: Aaron Reece <oboeaaron@xxxxxxx>
- To: rollei_list@xxxxxxxxxxxxx
- Date: Tue, 31 Jan 2006 23:06:35 -0500
I was thinking along those lines too, but he is going to be shooting
under fluorescent light already, which will probably feature an
abundance of green wavelength light. Still, it's worth a shot. My
favorite filter for portraiture is the Rollei Hellgrün, although I am
unsure of what that translates to in Wratten or other nomenclature.
-Aaron
On Jan 31, 2006, at 9:53 PM, DFStein@xxxxxxx wrote:
Try a green or light green filter.
- References:
- [rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
- From: DFStein
Other related posts:
- » [rollei_list] b&w film for portrait work...
- » [rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
- » [rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
- » [rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
- » [rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
- » [rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
- » [rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
- » [rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
- » [rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
- » [rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
- » [rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
- » [rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
On Jan 31, 2006, at 9:53 PM, DFStein@xxxxxxx wrote:
- [rollei_list] Re: b&w film for portrait work...
- From: DFStein