Hi, Collin,

Well, for one, it's what I'm used to.  When I started taking photos as a
teenager, b&w was far cheaper to buy and process than colour.  Over the
years, I've stuck with what I feel I know best.

I love what can be done with colour, but for me, colours sometimes
detract from the "essence" of a photo.  If one doesn't have the "crutch"
of pretty colours, one must concentrate on composition, texture, form,
pattern.  I suppose that the type of photography that I do - or rather
that I ~don't~ do, is part of it, too.  I don't take much nature, macro,
landscape and seascape - places where colour often abounds.  It seems
that there's not much colour in the city, where I take most of my photos
- or rather, colour isn't essential to capturing the cityscape.

When growing up, the photos that impressed me the most were b&w, so I
suppose that had an effect on me as well.

All of that being said, I take most of my family snaps in colour, and
about 1/2 of my vacation snaps in colour as well.  But my "serious"
stuff (serious to me, at least) is about 90% b&w.

regards,
frank

Collin Brendemuehl wrote:

> It was stated by someone yesterday that b&w
> is nice for the "abstract" character it provides.
>
> I use b&w for the sense of texture it provides.
> http://www.photocritique.net/g/s?zzoQwn-p13184249
> http://www.photocritique.net/g/s?zzohTn-p13184249
> (which is why I also like larger formats for color)
>
> Why do you use b&w?

--
"The optimist thinks this is the best of all possible worlds. The
pessimist fears it is true." -J. Robert
Oppenheimer


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