Adorama Camera > Adorama Learning Center > Techniques and How-Tos > Digital Darkroom/Printing > High-Contrast B&W in Photoshop Elements

High-Contrast B&W in Photoshop Elements

Back to Digital Darkroom/Printing page
Average of 0 ratings: 0.0 stars
 

0 comments Read comments Be the first to rate this article

Hw to create a groovy "Old School" darkroom special effect without smelling like fixer.

By Mason Resnick

September 1, 2008

I loved high-contrast printing using Agfa #6 high-contrast paper. This legendary paper’s characteristics were that it produced practically no midtones. It reduced images to blacks and whites and little else.


Bookmark and Share
In the 1990s Agfa discontinued #6 paper, and it wasn’t until the advent of digital photography that high-contrast printing was possible again.


Here’s how to get that Agfa #6 look, digitally:


Original color shot of a possibly familiar subject. I shot Lady Liberty from her Jersey side--Liberty State Park--using an Olympus SP-570 UZ camera.


First, take out the color. Go to Enhance > Remove Color to turn into Black-and-white if your original isn’t already monochrome.


Now go to Adjust Lighting > Brightness/Contrast. Move the Contrast slider to around 70-90%. There should be just a touch of gray but you should see mostly blacks and whites. I chose 85% for this shot so you could get a hint of sky. (In the darkroom, varying the dilution of the paper developer could fine-tune contrast in a similar manner, but it was a lot messier and took a long time!)


Too far? Just right? It's your choice! #6 paper could give you results close to this at 100% contrast, but more advanced photographers used lithographic paper to get this pure black and white effect.

 

About The Author

Mason Resnick is the editor of the Adorama Learning Center and a lifetime photography enthusiast.

moreRelated Workshops

SHARE THIS ARTICLE

Forward this article to a friend
To use this functionality you should have JS enabled
Bookmark this page

Reader Rating and Comments

0 readers rated this article. Average rating: 0.0 stars
 
  • View
  • 0 comments

Was this article helpful?

Rate this article

Your rating:

Post a comment

*required fields
To use this functionality you should have JS enabled
Bookmark this page