This past weekend out on Prince William Sound I took a few random scenic photos. Nothing really well thought out. Just the typical, wow that looks cool, click. And of course the end results rarely represent my recollection of reality. So with a couple of them I toyed around with B/W conversions. I guess the following is an example of why bother.
To set the context of why I even took this shot, the things that caught my attention were:
1. My wife told me to take the picture of the rock with the tree growing on top of it.
2. The overall scene of the point with the errosion, downed tree, craggly standing trees, etc. are typical on the sound.
3. I think the yellow seaweed that shows at low tide is cool and contrasts against the other muted colors.
4. It was a typical overcast day in coastal Alaska with a snow covered peak in the distance.
So those are the things I was trying to capture.
I recommend clicking through the images in the lightbox to see comparison from one to next.
As shot SOOC, satisfies no.1.
Post LR editing, satisfies no.1, 2, and 3 sort of. Missed on no.4 as this image doesn't really give the feeling of the low, dense cloud cover and overall impression of grey.
B/W conversion in OnOne Photosuite, Ansel in the Valley preset tweaked a bit. Satisfies 1, 2(mobetta), and 4 much better. The yellow weed is lost but wasn't all that dynamic in this particular shot anyway.
So I'm grudgingly coming around to the realization that B/W is better in some situations. But I'm still in the place that for me it is a method of potentially saving a scene that just isn't working in color. I have no idea looking at a given scene in person if it has any B/W potential or not.