When shooting color film you had to learn that and had no help previsualizing your shot. Photogs would often find a film that they liked and basically only use that one. Otherwise you might not realize how this scene or skin tone would be either made lifeless or garish by the way that your film saw things.
Digital has changed that as you can to a large degree when shooting RAW render the scene anyway you want it. For quite a while I wanted to see my flat and boring looking RAW files to look like themselves when I was doing an image review on my cameras LCD screen. But then I realized that once I found a look in Photoshop that made me happy 95% of the time I could simulate that by changing the color curve and saturation of the jpg processing my cameras do. The deal is that even if you are shooting RAW the camera makes an imbedded jpg into the RAW file for the preview. Thus the file isn’t processed but the preview is so I can get the feel of how the image will most likely look like when it comes out of Photoshop.
But when I started the Avery Brewing project I had in my head the idea of doing it in B&W for three reasons. 1) it makes things more timeless looking, 2) most of the brewing process takes place in white-ish rooms with big stainless steel containers and tubes so there isn’t much color content to begin with and 3) it puts the emphasis on form and lighting which I really dig.
So I decided to use a warm tone B&W mode for the shoots so that when I’m checking on my shots the tones “feel” right. I still will do the toning in P-Shop but after taking a few shots with my normal straight color preview preset and the warm tone, the B&W made me more inspired by a mile. And isn’t that what we want – to be inspired to make photos?
Here’s another from the Avery barrel room. They use a stainless steel nail as a simple plug for taking samples without introducing air into the barrel. For some reason the silhouetted pliers reminds me of that famously manipulated image by Gene Smith of Albert Schweitzer where he used like 5 negatives with the handles of tools in the foreground. Hmmm?
Technicals: Nikon D700 and Nikon AF-D 35mm f/2.0. ISO 400, f/2.0 @ 1/30th.
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