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In case you didnt know what sepia is..., by ricosg11 on Mar 30, 2007 5:13:10 GMT 1, I was in the dark on the meaning myself. here is what i dug up
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sepia tone is a type of digital photo in which the picture appears similar to a traditional black-and-white print toned with sepia. It appears in shades of brown, as opposed to grayscale.
Sepia can be produced in many digital cameras and camcorders, or it can be produced in the digital darkroom.
Many photographers prefer to use software, like Photoshop or The GIMP, because these offer more control over how much tint to apply the image, and exactly what hue. There is no single color known as "sepia" - the term covers a range of yellow and brown mixtures.
I was in the dark on the meaning myself. here is what i dug up
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Sepia tone is a type of digital photo in which the picture appears similar to a traditional black-and-white print toned with sepia. It appears in shades of brown, as opposed to grayscale.
Sepia can be produced in many digital cameras and camcorders, or it can be produced in the digital darkroom.
Many photographers prefer to use software, like Photoshop or The GIMP, because these offer more control over how much tint to apply the image, and exactly what hue. There is no single color known as "sepia" - the term covers a range of yellow and brown mixtures.
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In case you didnt know what sepia is..., by corblimeylimey on Mar 30, 2007 9:49:41 GMT 1, Sepia tone used to be known as the natural process that overtook older photographs as they faded into the obscurity of age. Just like a newspaper article left in archives, photographs go through a similiar process over the years that give them a brownish hue. Photographers and developers wanted to capture this special look and created the darkroom process to sepia tone photographs and give them that unique aged aspect.
In order to create a sepia tone photo in the darkroom, a photographer would first expose their roll of film and begin the normal development process. During that time, they would add a brown dye to the mix and expose the picture for a certain amount of time depending on how much of a hue they wanted to add to the picture.
Copied and pasted from hubpages.com/hub/Adding_Sepia_Tone_to_Digital_Photos
Sepia tone used to be known as the natural process that overtook older photographs as they faded into the obscurity of age. Just like a newspaper article left in archives, photographs go through a similiar process over the years that give them a brownish hue. Photographers and developers wanted to capture this special look and created the darkroom process to sepia tone photographs and give them that unique aged aspect. In order to create a sepia tone photo in the darkroom, a photographer would first expose their roll of film and begin the normal development process. During that time, they would add a brown dye to the mix and expose the picture for a certain amount of time depending on how much of a hue they wanted to add to the picture. Copied and pasted from hubpages.com/hub/Adding_Sepia_Tone_to_Digital_Photos
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ogrgel
New Member
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December 2006
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In case you didnt know what sepia is..., by ogrgel on Mar 30, 2007 10:10:53 GMT 1, Sepia tone used to be known as the natural process that overtook older photographs as they faded into the obscurity of age. Just like a newspaper article left in archives, photographs go through a similiar process over the years that give them a brownish hue. Photographers and developers wanted to capture this special look and created the darkroom process to sepia tone photographs and give them that unique aged aspect. In order to create a sepia tone photo in the darkroom, a photographer would first expose their roll of film and begin the normal development process. During that time, they would add a brown dye to the mix and expose the picture for a certain amount of time depending on how much of a hue they wanted to add to the picture. Copied and pasted from hubpages.com/hub/Adding_Sepia_Tone_to_Digital_Photos
Hi CBL .. .. how simple/difficult do you think it was to do this effect on a print ?
Sepia tone used to be known as the natural process that overtook older photographs as they faded into the obscurity of age. Just like a newspaper article left in archives, photographs go through a similiar process over the years that give them a brownish hue. Photographers and developers wanted to capture this special look and created the darkroom process to sepia tone photographs and give them that unique aged aspect. In order to create a sepia tone photo in the darkroom, a photographer would first expose their roll of film and begin the normal development process. During that time, they would add a brown dye to the mix and expose the picture for a certain amount of time depending on how much of a hue they wanted to add to the picture. Copied and pasted from hubpages.com/hub/Adding_Sepia_Tone_to_Digital_PhotosHi CBL .. .. how simple/difficult do you think it was to do this effect on a print ?
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In case you didnt know what sepia is..., by corblimeylimey on Mar 30, 2007 10:25:33 GMT 1, Sepia tone used to be known as the natural process that overtook older photographs as they faded into the obscurity of age. Just like a newspaper article left in archives, photographs go through a similiar process over the years that give them a brownish hue. Photographers and developers wanted to capture this special look and created the darkroom process to sepia tone photographs and give them that unique aged aspect. In order to create a sepia tone photo in the darkroom, a photographer would first expose their roll of film and begin the normal development process. During that time, they would add a brown dye to the mix and expose the picture for a certain amount of time depending on how much of a hue they wanted to add to the picture. Copied and pasted from hubpages.com/hub/Adding_Sepia_Tone_to_Digital_PhotosHi CBL .. .. how simple/difficult do you think it was to do this effect on a print ?
Are you talking about a photographic print? if you're talking about the Morons print thats completely different because it looks like they've created a sepia effect by printing in 2 brown inks and a yellow (plus the green for the numbers)
Sepia tone used to be known as the natural process that overtook older photographs as they faded into the obscurity of age. Just like a newspaper article left in archives, photographs go through a similiar process over the years that give them a brownish hue. Photographers and developers wanted to capture this special look and created the darkroom process to sepia tone photographs and give them that unique aged aspect. In order to create a sepia tone photo in the darkroom, a photographer would first expose their roll of film and begin the normal development process. During that time, they would add a brown dye to the mix and expose the picture for a certain amount of time depending on how much of a hue they wanted to add to the picture. Copied and pasted from hubpages.com/hub/Adding_Sepia_Tone_to_Digital_PhotosHi CBL .. .. how simple/difficult do you think it was to do this effect on a print ? Are you talking about a photographic print? if you're talking about the Morons print thats completely different because it looks like they've created a sepia effect by printing in 2 brown inks and a yellow (plus the green for the numbers)
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ogrgel
New Member
🗨️ 502
👍🏻 20
December 2006
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In case you didnt know what sepia is..., by ogrgel on Mar 30, 2007 10:37:16 GMT 1, Hi CBL .. .. how simple/difficult do you think it was to do this effect on a print ? Are you talking about a photographic print? if you're talking about the Morons print thats completely different because it looks like they've created a sepia effect by printing in 2 brown inks and a yellow (plus the green for the numbers)
yeah .. sorry mate .. I meant Morons..
Hi CBL .. .. how simple/difficult do you think it was to do this effect on a print ? Are you talking about a photographic print? if you're talking about the Morons print thats completely different because it looks like they've created a sepia effect by printing in 2 brown inks and a yellow (plus the green for the numbers) yeah .. sorry mate .. I meant Morons..
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