| The Complete Guide to Black & White Digital Photography (A Lark Photography Book) |  | Author: Michael Freeman Publisher: Lark Books Category: Book
List Price: $29.95 Buy New: $18.75 as of 7/30/2010 20:49 CDT details You Save: $11.20 (37%)
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Seller: indoobestsellers Rating: 5 reviews Sales Rank: 348,570
Media: Paperback Pages: 224 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 2 Dimensions (in): 10.1 x 9.2 x 0.7
ISBN: 1600595235 Dewey Decimal Number: 778.3 EAN: 9781600595233 ASIN: 1600595235
Publication Date: November 3, 2009 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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| • | ISBN13: 9781600595233 | | • | Condition: New | | • | Notes: BUY WITH CONFIDENCE, Over one million books sold! 98% Positive feedback. Compare our books, prices and service to the competition. 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed |
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Product Description
Michael Freeman—our top digital photography author and a worldwide name—presents the most comprehensive book yet on black-and-white digital photography. Oversized, beautifully illustrated, and far-reaching in scope, this guide is destined to be a standard reference for years to come. Freeman covers all aspects of black-and-white digital photography: its fine art tradition as well as its techniques. Learn how to see and expose in black and white, digitally convert color to monochrome, and develop a black-and-white digital workflow. Explore creative choices and how to interpret various subjects most skillfully in monochrome. Finally, get an expert’s advice on printing and displaying black-and-white photographs to best effect.
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| Customer Reviews: Another good Freeman book May 21, 2010 Jack E. Coster (WV USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I have several of Michael Freeman's books and find him to be one of my favorite authors on things photographic. The Black and White book is a complete coverage of B&W in the digital world of photography. The opening section, The Black and White Tradition, is a gem of the history and impact of B&W photography. The entire book is profusely illustrated with photos and screen captures of processing steps.
I do have a bone to pick -- a bone in previous works of Freeman's from Lark Books--and that is the disturbing frequency of typos and missing words. Looks to me like poor editing on the part of Lark and over-reliance on spell-checkers for proofing. Come on Lark, you can do better in that department.
Another success for Michael Freeman February 6, 2010 S. Weinstein 4 out of 4 found this review helpful
I have purchased many of Michael Freeman's books. This one meets all of the excellent standards that I like and respect about his writings. I particularly found his comparisons with color imaging and silver based photography stimulating. The only criticism I have is the poor proof reading. There are many misspelled words, words left out, etc. As a result reading the book can be a bit tedious. This was not the case with the authors other books.
Poor Choice January 25, 2010 Paul 4 out of 7 found this review helpful
As good as Freeman's The Photographer's Eye is, this title is pathetic. Page after page of copy-editing errors, incorrect captions, misunderstanding the software---the list goes on and on. Clearly this book was rushed into print and never even proofed by the author. Only buy this if you enjoy lighting cigars with Jacksons. A much better choice is Beardmore's Advanced Black & White Digital Photography. While not perfect, at least Beardmore proofed his book and seems to have a grasp of the conversion tools in PS & LR.
Complete... indeed and very readable too! December 14, 2009 Weijenberg (the Netherlands) 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
This book is almost square, a fine format for displaying the well chosen images. It says "Black & White" but it also says "Complete Guide", and that's so true. Here you find a very methodic approach to this subject. Starting with simple straight forward color to B&W conversion and showing clearly that the simple way is quick and so dirty, Michael soon leads us into the world of creatively making what we want and how to tweak the image to get that result. Michael shows us (using Photoshop as main tool) step by step how to tackle the issues, from the color image itself via the conversion (tools) to processing the converted result. Other conversions (like duotones, InfraRed, solarization) are very well explained, in completely worked out examples. Likeable is that he really shows the different possiblities, sometimes to show that some ways are not producing top quality work, sometimes to show the choices, creative decisions you have to make for yourself. Plug-ins and other specialistic tools (for making digital look like film, for noise-reduction etc.) are nicely introduced, showing where, if and when they are needed.
The images are beautiful and to the point. The examples show that seeing in color is so different from seeing in B&W. Michael makes us aware of thinking beforehand in B&W, shown also in work made by the masters (Ansel Adams, Edward Weston and more). The Zone system is not left untouched in this book. If you think: B&W? Easy: desaturate, done. Then think again, from what you see here, you know this conversion can be done so much better. The displaying, mounting, presenting of the work are also covered. This really is a complete guide!
When you pick this up you have a very attractive book in your hands. Written for easy reference, no lengthy chapters, but concise and direct 2, 3 pages on each subject. And believe me, you want to pick up this book, time and time again, to become a master yourself, at least in the processing and finishing department.
Another great book November 15, 2009 cortlander (Cortlandt Manor, NY USA) 7 out of 7 found this review helpful
I have several of Mr Freeman's books:
The Photographer's Eye
Perfect Exposure
Top Digital Photography Tips
The Complete Guide to Black and White Digital Photography is just as good as the others. The layout and quality of prints is pleasing. More importantly the author not only displays a deep knowledge of the topic but supplements each one with detailed pictures. Mr Freeman writes well and I find his explanations well reasoned and easy to understand.
Post processing is a big part of digital Black and White photography. Photoshop/Camera Raw curves and color sliders are used to explain many of the processing steps, but these are common in most photo processing software. I like the way the author discusses a topic, shows an original color photo, its default transformation to black and white, followed by several steps showing effects of changing one or two hues.
Digital processing is just one of the four sections in the book:
1. The Black and White Tradition
2. Digital Monochrome
3. Creative Choices
4. Printing and Display
The two hundred plus large size pages are quite absorbing.
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