While trying out ISO 1600 monochrome on the DP3M, I shot the Color Checker.
This is the same shot, first in colour as normal, and second rendered as Monochrome with the bias 99% to the "blue" layer.
It is not a blue-sensitive layer. If it were, the blue squares would be much lighter than the red squares. On a blue-sensitive film or plate, red colours come out almost black. This top layer seems to be sensitive to all colours, as indeed is shown by the often viewed graph.
The equivalent rendering for the Middle and Bottom layers is left as an exercise for the reader (who will need a Color Checker or really any multi-coloured subject).
One conclusion from this is that if you want the classic effect of white clouds against a nearly black sky, you can put a red filter on the camera, just as for B&W panchromatic film, and still render from the less-noisy top layer only.
Something to try in the Summer.
This is the same shot, first in colour as normal, and second rendered as Monochrome with the bias 99% to the "blue" layer.
It is not a blue-sensitive layer. If it were, the blue squares would be much lighter than the red squares. On a blue-sensitive film or plate, red colours come out almost black. This top layer seems to be sensitive to all colours, as indeed is shown by the often viewed graph.
The equivalent rendering for the Middle and Bottom layers is left as an exercise for the reader (who will need a Color Checker or really any multi-coloured subject).
One conclusion from this is that if you want the classic effect of white clouds against a nearly black sky, you can put a red filter on the camera, just as for B&W panchromatic film, and still render from the less-noisy top layer only.
Something to try in the Summer.
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