Wetlook World ForumCurrent time: Mon 06/05/24 02:56:04 GMT |
Message # 29108.11.1 Subject: Re: My criteria are: Date: Thu 17/05/07 00:56:24 GMT Name: Telcontar Email: mrnemesis@ntlworld.com |
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Depends what you seek. I like shine. Dark clothes by definition reflect little light; pale-coloured clothes reflect a lot of light. Shine works by reflecting light. You're going to get the best shine off the darkest clothes as the contrast is the greatest. White t-shirts give the best translucency but the worst shine.
If you want clothes that go darker (which I also do) then an intermediate brightness is best ...
The real problem with black clothes is lighting. A lot of wetlook photography even from professionals fails to be lit properly. Wet hair for example is a matter of texture and to get texture in dark wet hair, you need a lot of light. Black clothes are the same -- there's dry/wet contrast if there is enough light. The extremely limited intensity range of digital imagery poses a significant problem, and one that the human eye and brain (since the nervous system around the eye performs a lot of preprocessing) can cope with. Classic example: bright skies are often white in photos and film, which the eye and brain compensate for perfectly when you seeing it first hand. I can look at my computer screen across a dark room and make out the screen contents perfectly. Switch on the light, and the screen goes from being be a collossal margin the brightest object in the room, to a relatively dim one. A camera would shit a brick over that, and I don't even notice any intensity change.
Of course, I also have to consider what I think the girl should be wearing when dry, both because being dry is the majority of life, and because of wanting to see her wet in her normal clothes. |
In reply to Message (29108.11) My criteria are:
By Sopping - Wed 16/05/07 13:20:19 GMT That the material look really wet as opposed to when it is still dry. That is why I prefer light pastels, blue, yellow, red. Black often does not look different wet or dry. Black often does not show a waterline when a girl gets gradually wet - my favorite mode. White is my second choice, as it may well go see-thru, but sometimes you cannot tell the wet from dry areas. I dislike leather intensely for exactly that reason. Faded blue jeans turn dark in a very satisfactory manner - dark ones do not. In short, when the girl is wet, she should, bygod, LOOK wet.
That's my story and I'm sticking to it!
S: |
In reply to Message (29108) Question to forum user
By Mike - va2swl@yahoo.com Tue 15/05/07 18:23:23 GMT I would like to know what is your favorite wet colour ? Has it got any mather ?
For my self blue is my favorite wet colour
Am I the only one that has a favorite color?
Thank you
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