I took some black and white pictures with my Sony Alpha 6000 and when I transferred them to my laptop, all the pictures appeared in color. Is there a solution how I can transfer the original image with a filter?
With under in the camera settings.
otherwise maybe try a picture editing program like Gimp, which is also free and recommendable
S / W is not the same as S and W. It is incredibly complicated to generate a suitable SW filter. I bet the picture will never have the same chroma as on the camera.
The question would be how you imported the pictures.
I recommend that you do not plug in the camera and then simply copy the images via the explorer, but rather right-click on the drive / camera symbol of the camera in the explorer and then select the "import images or videos" tool. That works real miracles with such projects, even if you don't trust him, the little helper.
Nothing ventured nothing gained.
That may be stupid to say, but don't underestimate the possibilities of digital image processing. If you work your way into it, there's a lot to be done.
and black and white can still be changed on so many levels.
e.g. Should originally red areas be black or white, with what intensity… There are art filters and and and
As I said a lot… Believe me, I've spent quite a few hours with it
Every camera from a well-known manufacturer has its own filter. In the past, this was due to the ISO standard and the production capacities of the film producers and the chemical composition.
for example, a codac "photo plate" had a different chemical basis than a Canon film.
Nowadays this is digitally imitated in which the manufacturers of the cameras go to great lengths to create a spectrum of luminance and chromates that is as natural as possible, which is based on the properties of the then still chemical processes in photo technology.
gimp, is a freeware GPL tool that certainly has no codac or AGFA filter. I also don't think there's a plugin on the freeware market.
The simplest thing is to re-import the images with the correct setting, preferably not the RAW image, because it naturally has color as long as the camera does not have a SW sensor or the image was recorded with an IR and UV filter.
But you didn't impose yourself. Now you're almost slipping down.
😅 true but unfortunately I can't help you.
I'm not the questioner. I did not ask for help.