Monochromous

25/06/2004

How monochrome can monochrome be?
I used to think black and white was just black and white. Then a couple weeks ago, I saw a really nice cover on a Practical Photography magazine – it was a close up of an eye, in black and white. Inspired, I bought it hoping I could get some ideas on how these people do it. I got more – tips!

So here’s what I tried.


This is the original photo
We took that at Chinatown 2 weeks ago, and I’ve been itching to convert that to monochrome.


Atttempt 1 – Channel Mixer
To find the Channel Mixer, go to Image > Adjustments > Channel mixer. Check the monochrome box. You can mix and match the colours until you’re satisfied. I forgot exactly what I had, but it was something like 80 red, 30 green, and 5 blue.


Atttempt 2 – Desaturate
This was the quick and dirty option. Go to Image > Adjustments > Desaturate.


Atttempt 3 – Lab Colour
According to the mag, this is similar to the Grayscale method of conversion, and produces crisp results. Ok. If they say so. For this, go to Image > Mode > Lab colour. Click on the channels palette and select Lightness. The other 3 channels will go invisible. Then go to Image > Mode > Grayscale.

So anyway. If you want, have a go. Personally, I like using the Channel Mixer, the results were a bit more dramatic, and it was more fun to play around with. The results of the other 2 options was a little flat. Well, let me know what you think.

It’s hard to describe Coraline
It’s a children’s book – but I don’t think a kid under 3 would quite get it. I could be wrong, the kids these days seem to start with an IQ of 130 out of the womb or something. But you’d let a kid read Roald Dahl, I think the kid can read Coraline. It’s kinda like that.

It’s interesting, I like the themes in the book, and what the protagonist Coraline embodies. It’s an intelligent girl, curious, spunky and really a typical kid. She gets thrown into a strange situation and she doesn’t lose her compassion. I really like the character. It’s really nice that he wrote about a normal kid, without heaps of supernatural powers, with just courage and good sense.

It’s not a terribly complex book, it was short, and I got the paperback with few pictures. Still I enjoyed it immensely, and I can’t wait till my niece grows old enough to appreciate it. Till then, the book is mine.