Nikon D50

996GT2

Diamond Member
Jun 23, 2005
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A lot of people shoot in color, and then post-process in Photoshop to black and white because that way you can still keep the color image should you want it.
 

xanis

Lifer
Sep 11, 2005
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I don't know of any way to change the shooting mode to B&W, but personally, I shoot in color and then convert it to B&W in PS when I post-process. Hopefully you're shooting in RAW so you can just move the saturation slider to zero and be done. If not, however, you can do Image > Adjustments > Black and White, or just desaturate. I recommend the former though because it usually looks better (at least to me).
 

troytime

Golden Member
Jan 3, 2006
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Originally posted by: Xanis
I don't know of any way to change the shooting mode to B&W, but personally, I shoot in color and then convert it to B&W in PS when I post-process. Hopefully you're shooting in RAW so you can just move the saturation slider to zero and be done. If not, however, you can do Image > Adjustments > Black and White, or just desaturate. I recommend the former though because it usually looks better (at least to me).

there are MUCH better ways to convert to B&W.
please see Odin's awesome tutorial
 

jpeyton

Moderator in SFF, Notebooks, Pre-Built/Barebones
Moderator
Aug 23, 2003
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Originally posted by: jmagg
The D50 doesn't shoot in black and white.
Incorrect; if you're shooting JPEG, you can adjust the picture control to shoot B&W only. All color information in the JPEGs is discarded.

But if you shoot RAW, the B&W picture control is merely appended onto the full color RAW file. If you read the RAW file with Nikon Capture or View, it will display the picture in B&W, but you can also change the picture control in the program and bring back the color information.