>>4186107>I like your B&W post-processingThank you.
>can you go into a little detail on your post-processing workflow?Sure:
It varies depending on the camera.
For the photos from my 2020 show, those were all shot on Snoy a74r, so it came down to me chimping out in lightroom, finding the look I wanted and copy/pasting settings then tweaking per image. Usually most of the heavy lifting is done in the curves, the color tweaking for BNW was minimal. After lightroom I'd take them into photoshoop and print, then tweak in photoshoop so that the physical print more closely matches what is on screen. Typically, the prints come out flatter compared to our backlit screens.
For fujifag xt4, I've tried really hard to simplify the process. First of all, I've taken a couple of recipes I've liked from fuji weekly and set them in camera. I primarily use the tri-x 400 recipe. After shooting I'll do my selects in lightroom, make a folder of all the raws selected, take that folder into the fujifag software, fujifag x raw studio, convert the raws to jpgs only slightly tweaking the recipe if needed. After everything is converted with the trix400 look, they all go back into lightroom to straighten, crop, maybe tweak a little more then call it a day. Unfortunately, I have not printed anything from the xt4 yet, but I am picking up a photo printer from a friend next week and will begin experimenting with it to prepare for the show.
For picrel, that was taken in a dimly lit room with a snoy rx100vii. Since the lighting was so crappy, I just took into lightroom mobile and chimped out with curves, dehaze, and maybe a small amount of clarity.
Perhaps once I get the printer, I will make a thread of prints at home to show you guys.