Luminous Landscape Forum

The Art of Photography => The Coffee Corner => Topic started by: DavidJ on September 16, 2006, 06:45:54 am

Title: Lens colour casts
Post by: DavidJ on September 16, 2006, 06:45:54 am
Your lens develops a dirty yellow colour cast, shifts focal length, loses contrast and develops the most awful flair. A photographers nightmare - no reality for many of us as we get older, the lens in queston being the one in our eyes. It has happened to me very rapidly over the last year affecting one eye very noticeably. Ten days ago a new lens was implanted in the affected eye- plastic not L glass! What a difference. Whites look almost blue, greens are green and there is not as much dirty haze in the sky as I thought.

Cataract is often written about as occasionally affecting artists - Monet is the most quoted example. Look at any of the opthalmology web sites and you will see how common it is. Two of the others having surgery on the same day as I did looked to be in their forties.

I guess my reason for posting this is as a reminder that colour management starts and ends with the eyes and they can go off very badly. (I am now aware that what I had thought to be my good eye has a yellow cast)


David
Title: Lens colour casts
Post by: 32BT on September 16, 2006, 06:55:48 am
Ah, but chromatic adaptation goes a long way. Good to know they have successfully "upgraded" your lensware. Now, how do you know the new lens doesn't actually have a blue color-cast? ;-)
Title: Lens colour casts
Post by: dlashier on September 16, 2006, 06:35:50 pm
I'm waiting for the zoom implants.

Seriously though, this is the best argument for always wearing shades if you spend a lot of time in the sun. The "shade" isn't the important part, it's the UV filtering.

- DL