But I think it doesn't matter for black skin. Can you show me "bad" picture with vivid color and black man?Films with vivid color palettes such as Ektar or Velvia will tend to make people look magenta, purple, etc.
This comment is not meant to offend anyone, so I offer my apologies in advance to anyone who may take this the wrong way.
I realize that this is a photographic forum, in particular a question of proper exposure and not the subject of race or ethnicity. To be more specific, the question is one of propertly recording the reflectance of light waves from the subject onto a photographic medium.
It just stuck me that, in the truest sense, I have never met anyone with "black skin." Nor have I met anyone with "white skin."
We are a species comprising a multiplicity of races, creeds, ethnicity, color and nationality. Personally, I feel the word "color," or words denoting a particular color, should be replaced with something a bit more neutral. Maybe skin-tone, or pigmentation.
No human being is truly black, or white, yellow, or red. Individually, our skin vary in hue, tonal characteristics and texture. What the eye and brain perceive are varying wavelengths of light.
I just hope one day, human beings will mature enough to grow out of the use of labels denoting skin pigmentation and or race. We are all one race. The human race.
There are no extraterrestrial beings on this planet.
Again, I apologize if these statements offend. It is not my intent to offend anyone.
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