evanbell Posted April 18, 2020 Share Posted April 18, 2020 Hi all, earlier today I took some shots on my Sony a6500 with a Canon 24mm FD lens and a red filter. I shot in RAW, with the intention of converting the images to b&w in post-processing. I had the b&w creative setting on the camera turned on, so while shooting I was viewing and exposing the images for b&w. However, I'm noticing some discrepancies in the exposure between what I took in camera and what I'm getting out of LR after converting to b&w. Though I properly exposed in camera, the images are coming out overexposed after the conversion in LR. I've attached some images to illustrate this. As you can see, the histograms in camera and on LR don't match. I'm guessing that when shooting on a red filter, the b&w conversion is more complicated than simply pressing a button. I just can't seem to find a way to reproduce the images I shot. Any tips would be much appreciated! Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Jochen_S Posted April 18, 2020 Share Posted April 18, 2020 I'd try to display the RGB channels and work on them individually in BW and merge the result (which could translate to "pick the one I like most"...) - Sorry neither an active Lightroom user nor shooting red filters on my color cameras. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
evanbell Posted April 18, 2020 Author Share Posted April 18, 2020 I'd try to display the RGB channels and work on them individually in BW and merge the result (which could translate to "pick the one I like most"...) - Sorry neither an active Lightroom user nor shooting red filters on my color cameras. Thanks for the reply. What I ended up doing was essentially working the histograms from scratch and creating my own preset. Still, I would think there'd be an easier way to go about it, if there was only a proper Sony profile I could apply to the RAW image. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Seaman Posted April 19, 2020 Share Posted April 19, 2020 (edited) It looks as if the B&W creative setting is modifying the histogram on the camera, so you are seeing the histogram after the conversion, rather than before. It's probably important to get the red channel correctly exposed for what you are doing, as the other channels don't contribute much, having largely been filtered out. Your red channel is overexposed on the Lightroom histogram. It may be best not to use the creative setting, instead use manual exposure or exposure compensation and by trial and error get the red channel histogram well exposed. You will not see the B&W results on the camera LCD, rather just a red image, but when you do post processing you should have more flexibility to achieve the desired result. This is how I worked when doing infrared with an R72 filter and unconverted camera. . I should say that I have no knowledge of your particular camera. Edited April 19, 2020 by John Seaman Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rodeo_joe1 Posted April 19, 2020 Share Posted April 19, 2020 Looks as if you might have applied the red filter factor as an exposure compensation, but the camera also automatically compensated because of TTL metering - result; overexposure. They were RAW files right? So there should be no problem with simply reducing the exposure in the RAW converter. Alternatively, you can adjust the tonality using the curves or levels tool. The shadows are far too bright, and that's an easy fix in curves or levels. BTW, I'm not sure why you're bothering with a physical red filter at all. Just shoot in colour and apply a virtual filter in post. It works just as well, and is more controllable. For example; this is a scan from a colour negative - and here's a 'straight' B&W conversion. Now a conversion with red filter applied - Note the improved sky detail. A more dramatic example; again from a colour neg. First 'straight' - And red-filtered during conversion. These were done using the limited editor on my smartphone! Photoshop has a far more sophisticated monochrome conversion module. Or you can apply filters of any colour and depth you want by using layers in almost any decent image editor. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
rodeo_joe1 Posted April 19, 2020 Share Posted April 19, 2020 Is this more the effect you were after? Done using the curves tool in my Android phone editor. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Seaman Posted April 19, 2020 Share Posted April 19, 2020 (edited) Here's what I mean about exposing the red channel for infrared work - which I feel is similar in principle to using a red filter - note that the Nikon D70 I used does not display separate channel histograms, so I had to underexpose the combined histogram to get the exposure I wanted: The Photoshop histograms on the left show the true picture, the camera histogram on the right, which is a combination of the different channels, suggests underexposure. Above is my monochrome conversion using Photoshop and Nik Silver Efex 2. Below is a shot I did with a normal red filter (not infrared) using similar exposure and post processing. Edited April 19, 2020 by John Seaman 1 Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
frans_waterlander Posted April 19, 2020 Share Posted April 19, 2020 Good inputs all. In addition to, or maybe instead of, using color filters in post-processing, I might suggest using a channel-mixer to convert from color to B&W. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
digitaldog Posted April 19, 2020 Share Posted April 19, 2020 The Photoshop histograms on the left show the true picture, the camera histogram on the right, which is a combination of the different channels, suggests underexposure. You're shooting in raw; none of those Histograms show you anything about exposure. You need to view a raw Histogram using something like RawDigger. 1 Author “Color Management for Photographers" & "Photoshop CC Color Management" (pluralsight.com) Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
John Seaman Posted April 19, 2020 Share Posted April 19, 2020 It's a while since I made the picture with the histograms, for a camera club talk I did on infrared photography, but I recall the Photoshop histograms were from a JPEG I processed from the D70 RAW file. The object being to try and get a decent spread of exposure on the red channel. The old D70, which I used because it is quite sensitive to infrared, can't display the three channels separately, so judging exposure by adjusting the combined histogram was the best I could do. Wit a low MP camera, making an image mostly from the information in a single channel doesn't make for great image quality which is why I'm looking for a newer IR converted camera. Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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