>
>Definitely not free is Tiffen DFX3 which appears to simulate almost all
>of Tiffen's glass filters. It's available as standalone for $130 or
>plug-in for $150. According to Wiki, Kodak Wratten filters are actually
>produced by Tiffen under license from Kodak. This is the product
>selection page <http://www.tiffensoftware.com/products/dfx-products> and
>this is the page for the standalone app... selected only for the product
>description of the filters available. If there exists a filter you'd
>like to have it's probably here.
><http://www.tiffensoftware.com/products/dfx-standalone>
>
Looking at the DfxV3 manual, this does not appear to be what I had in
mind. There is a very, very small selection of B&W filters, all in generic
base colours with no reference to Wratten numbers. This is much more a
software package for artistic manipulations. Nice, though.
Chris
When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro
- Hunter S. Thompson
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