Boris Liberman wrote: >Marnie, > >First of, the bottom left corner is slightly distracting. As for the >conversion - I see nothing particularly wrong with it. I'd add a word >about my own taste on b/w if you don't mind. I usually add a bit of a >warm/sepia tone on top of my b/w conversions. For some reason I really >like warmish b/w renderings. Could be an interesting exercise, because >when you apply a warm tone, you may "suddenly" notice certain things >about tonality that did not catch your eye in "plain" b/w variety. > >Just my pixels worth... > >Boris > > I'm not crazy about sepia, myself, but I've used it for black and white I was printing with the Epson 820 when I had it because i couldn't get a good black.... but it did "brown" ok :)
ann > >[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote: > > >>Taken on the high road to Taos. I spotted this barn, loved it, pulled off >>and spent about 5-10 minutes taking various shots. I could easily have spent >>30-45 minutes, but I was in rather a hurry. >> >>I've been playing with the B&W conversion routine built-in to Elements 5, >>and converting is not really my forte. I add my own fiddling to what is >>built-in, so I'd appreciate any input on the B&W conversion. >> >>http://members.aol.com/eactivist/PAWS/pages/oldbarn.htm >> >>I think this is the best shot of what I got, okay, but a bit busy. I don't >>think I ever got the best angle on it. >> >>Comments, welcome. >> >>Marnie aka Doe :-) >> >><BR><BR><BR>**************************************<BR> AOL now offers free >>email to everyone. Find out more about what's free from AOL at >>http://www.aol.com. >> >> >> > > > > -- PDML Pentax-Discuss Mail List [email protected] http://pdml.net/mailman/listinfo/pdml_pdml.net

