from what ive found on google, if you use a red filter in color photography, it will block the yellows and blues. and a blue filter will block the reds and yellows.
link to below:
Filters
WHAT DO COLORED FILTERS DO?
Colored filters absorb light and transmit the light they don’t absorb. A filter is yellow because it absorbs blue light (its complementary color) and allows yellow light to pass through it.
We say an object - a banana, for instance - is yellow because it reflects yellow light. So, if we use a yellow filter when photographing a banana, the filter will allow all the yellow light to pass through it and reach the film.
But, what if we use a green filter when photographing a yellow banana? Will the green filter allow the banana’s yellow light to reach the film? The answer is no, it won’t. The yellow light is blocked. Well, if that’s so, you may ask, how can a yellow banana be photographed through a green filter? Good question. The answer lies in remembering that yellow light is a combination of green and red light. (See Light and its color.) So a green filter blocks the red portion but allows the green portion of the banana’s reflected light to reach the film.
On color film, the banana would therefore register as being green because the red portion of its reflected light is absorbed and only its green light strikes the film.
so. according to this, if I used green filter? perhaps that will alleviate the problem.