View allAll Photos Tagged Infrared,
The city marquee sign for Laoag City, Ilocos Norte, Philippines in infrared. The name of the city "LAOAG" is a derivation of the Ilocano term "lawag", which means light/brightness. Laoag, officially the City of Laoag, is a third-class city and capital of the province of Ilocos Norte in the Philippines,
Nikon FM2
Nikon Nikkor 35mm f/1.4 AIS
Kodak HIE @ISO200
(expired in 2003)
Heliopan Deep Red filter
Kodak HC-110 Dilution B 6mins
Norway
Epson V850
Negative Lab Pro
Lightroom
Shot in infrared.
Springtime sunshine-- what's one to do when the flowers bloom and temps tick up into the 80's? Hide from the pollen and death rays in a closet, naturally. Wake me when the trees pollenate via puffs of Albuterol and the weather forecast is approximately “Scotland.”
Quarantine life can get a tad claustrophobic. Disappearing into your surroundings. Cycle of similar sensory input day by day, can begin to feel like reflecting the habitat.
Have gotten so many questions regarding a third arm after participating in a COVID vaccine trial. Well, here it is. Call it a perk.
Photoshoot is done, home I go, can't resist to take quick shot back against the fading light and the silhouettes of the trees and the hunting stand on the hill.
Not sure what influence / effect of doing it on the IR spectrum had here (compared to a regular image); I mean for black & white. But I did some experimental developments too, where the sky turned out super orange and glow-y; with that it certainly paid off.
Was kind of conflicted which one to share. I still am actually.. 😮 😭
Do you wanna see it?
And by the way: This was done with the arguably "worst NIKKOR ever made", according to some. Granted, this is the third iteration, the AI version which doesn't seem to compare to the earlier Auto, C or K versions (all pre-AI). I think it's great performer, with visible light, but also on the near IR spectrum where it surprisingly peaks at a rather small aperture, f/11, which is no problem since there is hardly any hotspot to be found and also makes for a larger DOF, ..so very nice for landscape.
Nikon D90 (APS-C, fullspectrum mod)
Zoom-NIKKOR 43-86mm f/3.5 AI
Hoya R72 (720nm infrared pass-filter)
ISO200, ???mm, f/11, 0,8sec
(so 64,5-129mm full frame equivalent)
single shot, regular tripod, remote
Bought myself a infrared filter just to have a play, really like the mono effect you get from it. Haven't got a clue what I'm doing processing it but this is what I've come up with for my first attempt....If all goes well I might get myself a converted camera.
Photographed in 665 nanometer infrared using an infrared modified Canon 20D and rendered in channel inverted false color infrared.
Olympus Pen E-PM1 converted with 590nm infrared filter | Olympus M.Zuiko 60mm f2.8 Macro | 6 shot panorama
Vancouver as seen from my optometrist’s office.
I'm not sure how many people know about digital infrared photography. Basically, you use an infrared filter (and if you camera is sensitive to infrared light) it captures an image like this. The cool part is that foliage and leaves glow white (especially when the sun shines on them), and the sky is often darker than usual.
If you haven't ever heard about infrared photography check this out: en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Infrared_photography
I used a Hoya R72 Infrared filter for this shot. I was testing out the IR sensitivity of my new Canon G9, and I have to say... its much better than my EOS350D
An archer's view of Hore Abbey from the Rock of Cashel. Infrared 720nm. I think my first 16:9 portrait format :-)