Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a family photographer. I find that photographers do this when their technical skill is not as great. It hides non-sharpness. There’s one very expensive well known family photographer in DC who does this and I cannot figure out why. She’s actually very good technically but if you tried to print those photos they’d be all washed out
OP here, this is good to know! We are a mixed race family and anytime a photographer uses any sort of weird coloring filter, at least one member of our family ends up looking really off. I'm finding it really hard to find a photographer nowadays that doesn't use any sort of filtering. What happened to just natural sunlight?
Have you tried discussing with a photographer directly? Have you worked with a photographer who shares your background?
I've read many stories about lighting Black actors, how film was designed for white skin tones, etc. I have to believe there are photographers in DC who can help you achieve the look you are going for
Regarding natural sunlight. Have you considered trying any of those AirBnB or GetYourGuide digital photoshoots for tourists?
Is anyone still using film?
My point was just that the photography world has scientifically investigated how light plays on different skin tones and other colored items.
My first digital camera was a Kodak and it was said to benefit from Kodak's long study into representing greenery the way that people enjoy seeing it. That research traced back to Kodachrome film research.
There has recently been a Polaroid film type craze among young people but that obviously doesn't suit OP's needs.
Yes film is still available by mail order.
Can you post a link to a family photographer that is still using film?
As for green and digital cameras, see Bayer filtering. Sensors are grayscale and green is oversampled.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a family photographer. I find that photographers do this when their technical skill is not as great. It hides non-sharpness. There’s one very expensive well known family photographer in DC who does this and I cannot figure out why. She’s actually very good technically but if you tried to print those photos they’d be all washed out
OP here, this is good to know! We are a mixed race family and anytime a photographer uses any sort of weird coloring filter, at least one member of our family ends up looking really off. I'm finding it really hard to find a photographer nowadays that doesn't use any sort of filtering. What happened to just natural sunlight?
Have you tried discussing with a photographer directly? Have you worked with a photographer who shares your background?
I've read many stories about lighting Black actors, how film was designed for white skin tones, etc. I have to believe there are photographers in DC who can help you achieve the look you are going for
Regarding natural sunlight. Have you considered trying any of those AirBnB or GetYourGuide digital photoshoots for tourists?
Is anyone still using film?
My point was just that the photography world has scientifically investigated how light plays on different skin tones and other colored items.
My first digital camera was a Kodak and it was said to benefit from Kodak's long study into representing greenery the way that people enjoy seeing it. That research traced back to Kodachrome film research.
There has recently been a Polaroid film type craze among young people but that obviously doesn't suit OP's needs.
Yes film is still available by mail order.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a family photographer. I find that photographers do this when their technical skill is not as great. It hides non-sharpness. There’s one very expensive well known family photographer in DC who does this and I cannot figure out why. She’s actually very good technically but if you tried to print those photos they’d be all washed out
OP here, this is good to know! We are a mixed race family and anytime a photographer uses any sort of weird coloring filter, at least one member of our family ends up looking really off. I'm finding it really hard to find a photographer nowadays that doesn't use any sort of filtering. What happened to just natural sunlight?
Have you tried discussing with a photographer directly? Have you worked with a photographer who shares your background?
I've read many stories about lighting Black actors, how film was designed for white skin tones, etc. I have to believe there are photographers in DC who can help you achieve the look you are going for
Regarding natural sunlight. Have you considered trying any of those AirBnB or GetYourGuide digital photoshoots for tourists?
Is anyone still using film?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a family photographer. I find that photographers do this when their technical skill is not as great. It hides non-sharpness. There’s one very expensive well known family photographer in DC who does this and I cannot figure out why. She’s actually very good technically but if you tried to print those photos they’d be all washed out
OP here, this is good to know! We are a mixed race family and anytime a photographer uses any sort of weird coloring filter, at least one member of our family ends up looking really off. I'm finding it really hard to find a photographer nowadays that doesn't use any sort of filtering. What happened to just natural sunlight?
Have you tried discussing with a photographer directly? Have you worked with a photographer who shares your background?
I've read many stories about lighting Black actors, how film was designed for white skin tones, etc. I have to believe there are photographers in DC who can help you achieve the look you are going for
Regarding natural sunlight. Have you considered trying any of those AirBnB or GetYourGuide digital photoshoots for tourists?
Anonymous wrote:It covers wrinkles and blemishes
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I’m a family photographer. I find that photographers do this when their technical skill is not as great. It hides non-sharpness. There’s one very expensive well known family photographer in DC who does this and I cannot figure out why. She’s actually very good technically but if you tried to print those photos they’d be all washed out
OP here, this is good to know! We are a mixed race family and anytime a photographer uses any sort of weird coloring filter, at least one member of our family ends up looking really off. I'm finding it really hard to find a photographer nowadays that doesn't use any sort of filtering. What happened to just natural sunlight?
Anonymous wrote:I’m a family photographer. I find that photographers do this when their technical skill is not as great. It hides non-sharpness. There’s one very expensive well known family photographer in DC who does this and I cannot figure out why. She’s actually very good technically but if you tried to print those photos they’d be all washed out