Bill Owens wrote:
> If I were to use a B&W filter, say yellow or red on a DSLR then convert the
> image from the sensor to B&W, would the results be the same as on film?

Not a stupid question at all!
In theory, it should be pretty much the same as shooting B&W film with 
the filter. Try it and see. (It's not as if you'll be wasting film!)

More significantly, post-processing can never *exactly* duplicate the 
effects of shooting through a color filter: After you've converted 
full-spectrum light into RGB values you can simulate the look of various 
color filters in B&W conversion, but never duplicate the effects 
precisely. This is because of metamerism, the way a discrete wavelength 
of light gets broken up into three separate RGB values.

(The term "metamerism" is usually used in a negative context, when 
describing the effects of prints appearing to change color balance under 
varying light sources, but it's also the term for the way human and 
animal visual systems -  and film/sensors - represent an infinite 
spectrum of colors through varying amounts of just three colors.)

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