they both take pictures and they both are very intresting like if you take a picture black and white it looks like more in the oldern years soif you take a digital it will be like in these days. but sometimes it looks cool when you take a black and white and it has something from these days
Les Meehan has written: 'Fotografia Digital' 'Black & White Digital Photography' 'Creative Exposure Control' 'Digital Image Making' 'Digital Photography Problem Solver' 'Digital Photography Basics' 'Creacion de Imagenes Digitales'
Finely powdered silver is black in color (which is what made it useful for black and white photography - now largely superseded by digital photography).
Popular photography magazines are Digital Photography Magazine, Popular Photography, Outdoor Photographer, Practical Photography, Black & White Photography, American Photo, Professional Photographer and many more.
Colour photography takes colour pictures and black and white photography take black and white pictures
In photography, a "negative" is an image that has all the colors inverted. For instance, in a black-and-white photograph, black is shown as white, and white as black.In photography, a "negative" is an image that has all the colors inverted. For instance, in a black-and-white photograph, black is shown as white, and white as black.In photography, a "negative" is an image that has all the colors inverted. For instance, in a black-and-white photograph, black is shown as white, and white as black.In photography, a "negative" is an image that has all the colors inverted. For instance, in a black-and-white photograph, black is shown as white, and white as black.
Sepia
One can learn more about black & white photography from a number of resources, the best one typically being one's local library. Another good resource on black & white photography is the Photography section of the National Geographic website.
Roger Fremier has written: 'Techniques for black & white photography' -- subject(s): Black-and-white photography
in the 1830s
black and white photography
It was black and white.
The word for black-and-white photography is "monochromatic" although some is technically not composed of black and white (or halftone dots) but rather shades of gray, known as "grayscale." Black-and-white photography also extended to the use of a single warmer tone called "sepia" (a reddish-brown pigment originally obtained from cuttlefish).