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Filters can modify the way in which a film records colours as monochrome tone values. They are disks of coloured glass or gelatin with controlled transmission characteristics. Placed in front of the camera lens, they preferentially transmit light of their own colour and hold back light of other colours. A yellow or yellow-green filter is often used in landscape photography to prevent overexposure of the blue sky and to bring out detail in cloud formations. Orange and red filters make the sky still darker and cut through haze by absorbing scattered blue light.

Contrast filters differentiate between the gray values of objects of different colour but of similar brightness. For instance, a red flower and green foliage record in similar shades of mid-gray. A red filter holds back green light to darken the green foliage, making the flower lighter; a green filter absorbs red light, thus darkening the flower. Such deliberate tone distortion is widely used in photomicrography and other fields.

Other filter types used in photography include ultraviolet, infrared, and polarizing filters. Ultraviolet-absorbing filters screen out ultraviolet rays at high altitudes (e.g., in mountain photography). Because camera lenses are not normally corrected for such rays, the rays can reduce image sharpness, even though the lenses allow only a small amount of ultraviolet to be transmitted. Infrared filters are used with infrared film to hold back visible light. Polarizing filters polarize light and can absorb polarized light if suitably oriented. Light reflected at certain angles from shiny surfaces of nonmetallic media (glass, water, varnish) is polarized; a properly oriented polarizing filter subdues such reflections in a picture.

Because a filter screens out part of the light, its use calls for extra exposure, the amount of which is indicated by a filter factor—e.g., 2×, which means the exposure time must be multiplied by 2. For cameras with an exposure-value scale, a filter may specify an exposure value reduction (such as -1 or -11/2; i.e., the indicated exposure value must be reduced by this amount). The factor of a given filter depends on the spectral sensitivity of the film, the colour quality of the lighting, the type of subject, the effect aimed at, and other exposure conditions.

Other film characteristics

Of practical interest to the photographer are the graininess, resolving power, and contrast of a film. Although they are characteristics of the film itself, they are influenced by the conditions of development (see below Black-and-white processing and printing).

Grain

The image derived from minute silver halide crystals is discontinuous in structure. This gives an appearance of graininess in big enlargements. The effect is most prominent with fast films, which have comparatively large silver halide crystals.

Resolving power and acutance

The fineness of detail that a film can resolve depends not only on its graininess but also on the light scatter or irradiation within the emulsion (which tends to spread image details) and on the contrast with which the film reproduces fine detail. These effects can be measured physically to give an acutance value, which is preferred to resolving power as a criterion of a film’s sharpness performance. Fine-grain films with thin emulsions yield the highest acutance.

Contrast

High-contrast films reproduce tone differences in the subject as great density differences in the image; low-contrast films translate tone differences into small density differences. The characteristic curve of a film obtained by plotting the density against the logarithm of the exposure (mentioned earlier under Sensitometry and speed) can be used to express a film’s contrast (see Figure 5). The slope of the straight-line section of the curve (sometimes called the gamma, actually the tangent of the angle α) indicates contrast: the steeper the slope, the higher the contrast rendering. General-purpose films yield medium contrast (gamma 0.7 to 1). High-contrast films (gamma 1.5 to 10) are used for copying line originals and other specialized purposes; low-contrast films for continuous-tone reproduction. Gamma is also used to indicate degree of development, since increased development generally results in a higher gamma.

Film structure and forms

Film consists of a number of layers and components: (1) A supercoat of gelatin, a few micrometres (one micrometre is 0.001 millimetre) thick, protects the emulsion from scratches and abrasion marks. (Pressure and rubbing can produce developable silver densities.) (2) The emulsion layer (silver halide suspended in gelatin) is usually nine to 12 micrometres (up to 1/2,000 inch) thick but may sometimes reach 25 micrometres. (3) A substrate or subbing layer promotes adhesion of the emulsion to the film base. (4) The film base, or support, is usually cellulose triacetate or a related polymer. The thickness may range from 0.08 to 0.2 millimetre (0.003 to 0.008 inch). Films for graphic arts and scientific purposes are often coated on a polyethylene terephthalate or other polyester support of high dimensional stability. Glass plates—once the most common support for negative materials—are now used only for applications requiring extreme emulsion flatness. (5) A backing layer on the rear of the film base counteracts curling. Usually it contains also a nearly opaque dye to suppress light reflection on the rear support surface. Such reflection (halation) reduces definition by causing halolike effects around very bright image points. Some film bases (especially in 35-mm films) are tinted gray to absorb light that has passed through the emulsion layer.

Sheet film

View and studio cameras generally take sheet film—single sheets (typical sizes range between 21/2 × 31/2 and 8 × 10 inches) loaded in the darkroom into light-tight film holders for subsequent insertion in the camera.