It has absolutely nothing to do with whether the camera is a DSLR. In fact, it really has nothing to do with the camera. You do that with an image editing program. You have to take the picture in color first.
It's called "selective color" and it's actually a very lame fad and a cliche. In case you haven't noticed, this question gets asked every single day, at least 20 or 30 times a day. Just type in "selective color" or "color splash" in the search box at the top of the page and you'll find THOUSANDS of questions and answers about this. In fact, there is a girl who just asked about this question right NOW...it's right below yours.
Or just ask one of the emo kids on MySpace...they like lame editing gimmicks like this, and I'm sure one of them could help you.
It has absolutely nothing to do with whether the camera is a DSLR. In fact, it really has nothing to do with the camera. You do that with an image editing program. You have to take the picture in color first.
It's called "selective color" and it's actually a very lame fad and a cliche. In case you haven't noticed, this question gets asked every single day, at least 20 or 30 times a day. Just type in "selective color" or "color splash" in the search box at the top of the page and you'll find THOUSANDS of questions and answers about this. In fact, there is a girl who just asked about this question right NOW...it's right below yours.
Or just ask one of the emo kids on MySpace...they like lame editing gimmicks like this, and I'm sure one of them could help you.
It's normally not the camera that does this, it's the editing program.
I have photoshop but if you don't have it, you can use Picnik.com which is free.
Just upload your photo, go to edit, create, then in the effects find Black and White. You can use the brush and paint the original back on.
On photoshop, you can duplicate the original photo, then on the copy, you put the saturation for all colours to 0. Then you simply take the eraser and erase whatever you want to keep like the original from the B&W layer.