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<blockquote data-quote="Marcel" data-source="post: 108407" data-attributes="member: 3903"><p>Jeff, when you shoot B&W with a digital camera, the capture is made in color and it's the camera's inside computer that converts it to B&W. When you convert to B&W with photoshop, you are presented with a complete array of filters you can play with as far as density as well as trying different colors. You see the effect on the screen as you apply them.</p><p></p><p>I think this is a much better approach than to stick a filter in front of the lens and then be stuck with the result.</p><p></p><p>Just my 2 cents.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="Marcel, post: 108407, member: 3903"] Jeff, when you shoot B&W with a digital camera, the capture is made in color and it's the camera's inside computer that converts it to B&W. When you convert to B&W with photoshop, you are presented with a complete array of filters you can play with as far as density as well as trying different colors. You see the effect on the screen as you apply them. I think this is a much better approach than to stick a filter in front of the lens and then be stuck with the result. Just my 2 cents. [/QUOTE]
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