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Thread: advice camera that takes both black and white and colour

  1. #1
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    Default advice camera that takes both black and white and colour

    I'm looking for a digital camera that shows pictures in both black and white and colour before printing is ther such a camera on the market for a reasnoble price.

  2. #2
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    Nikon Coolpix

  3. #3
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    You can do this with any camera if you edit it on a computer before printing
    Everyone is a genius,
    but if you judge a fish
    on its ability to climb a tree,
    it will live its whole life believing that it is stupid.....

  4. #4
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    I have a coolpix but i need to be able to view in black and white on the camera screen not on a computer but thanks for replying

  5. #5
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    I have to be able to have any picture taken on the camera screen in black and white i cant find a camera that does this but I know they exist.

  6. #6
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    You can do that on the coolpix. Its in the menu for settings.

  7. #7
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    Found this information here.... http://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/filters.htm

    Black-and-White with Digital Cameras
    Shoot your B/W images in color and then use Photoshop's channel mixer to convert to B/W. This allows you to choose the exact effect of using a colored filter in front of the lens after you've made the shot. This has many advantages:
    1.) You can get any and all possible filter results with only one image.
    2.) You can see what you're doing when choosing filter effects much better than while you're out shooting.
    3.) You also have a color image for free!
    4.) This is the serious one: you can use layers in Photoshop to apply different filters to different parts of the image. The only way to have gotten that with film was to either a.) use a filter taped together like a mosaic in front of the lens (not practical when you realize you also have to mosaic ND filters with them to compensate the different colors) or b.) composite print from several different negatives, again not exactly convenient.
    5.) There is no advantage to using a colored filter over the lens of a digital camera when shooting because:
    a.) The final images will still be colored. You still have to load them into Photoshop to make then black and white instead of black and red.
    b.) It's easier to compose due to the brighter finder.
    c.) There's no quality advantage: all digital cameras use color sensors anyway. Actually all color sensors are B/W sensors with RGB filters permanently painted on top of alternating pixels. Kodak made a very special B/W DSLR some years back without the RGB filter atop the sensor, and thus it did give the advantage of higher resolution and speed and you did have to use a color filter in front of the lens. Otherwise there are no B/W digital cameras common today.
    6.) The Canon 20D allows you to select color filter effects in camera, which is very handy if you only want B/W. It electronically applies the equivalent of a colored filter over the lens and converts to B/W in-camera. If you intend to spend time editing later you're still better off shooting in color and converting later due to #5 above. The 20D feature retains advantages # 2 and 5 and negates advantages # 1, 3, 4 above.
    “We're trapped in the belly of this horrible machine....
    And the machine is bleeding to death."


  8. #8
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    Quote Originally Posted by Dog-eared View Post
    You can do that on the coolpix. Its in the menu for settings.
    I've been in the menue settings and can't find anything that says show in black and white am i just being stupid and missing something. cheers Andy

  9. #9
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    Quote Originally Posted by Alrock View Post
    Found this information here.... http://www.kenrockwell.com/tech/filters.htm
    I need to be able to show the picture imediatley after its taken in black and white and it can be on a building site so I wont have a computer available only the camera will be with me

  10. #10
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    Thank you for all the advice I've finally been able to set the camera to black and white thank you all.

  11. #11
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    :-)

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