mikeyatswb
Perryville Dam
Rehoboth, Massachusetts
Taken with a Nikon Z6 converted to 590nm IR by LifePixel, purchased with big plans back in May and then sadly neglected over months filled with cycling, house projects, and work.
Filters: 590nm IR (internal), 10-stop ND. I wasn't sure how the 10-stop would work with the IR conversion, but was pleased to see that it did, though it behaved like a 9-stop.
History: "This site was originally known as Butterworth Falls when the area was settled in the late 1600′s. John Butterworth constructed a sawmill at the north side of Danforth Street prior to 1690. Butterworth owned a large farm that included what is now the nearby Rehoboth Country Club. The Carpenter family owned and operated this mill through the Revolution and up to the 1850′s, when it was purchased by the Perry family. That family operated a large turning mill on the south side of Danforth Street that produced tool handles as well as bobbins for the cotton manufacturing industry in the Blackstone Valley. This business lasted until the 1890′s. A sawmill and gristmill operated on the site until the mid-1930′s." (source: www.southcoasttoday.com/article/99999999/TOWN11/70629009)
Perryville Dam
Rehoboth, Massachusetts
Taken with a Nikon Z6 converted to 590nm IR by LifePixel, purchased with big plans back in May and then sadly neglected over months filled with cycling, house projects, and work.
Filters: 590nm IR (internal), 10-stop ND. I wasn't sure how the 10-stop would work with the IR conversion, but was pleased to see that it did, though it behaved like a 9-stop.
History: "This site was originally known as Butterworth Falls when the area was settled in the late 1600′s. John Butterworth constructed a sawmill at the north side of Danforth Street prior to 1690. Butterworth owned a large farm that included what is now the nearby Rehoboth Country Club. The Carpenter family owned and operated this mill through the Revolution and up to the 1850′s, when it was purchased by the Perry family. That family operated a large turning mill on the south side of Danforth Street that produced tool handles as well as bobbins for the cotton manufacturing industry in the Blackstone Valley. This business lasted until the 1890′s. A sawmill and gristmill operated on the site until the mid-1930′s." (source: www.southcoasttoday.com/article/99999999/TOWN11/70629009)