View allAll Photos Tagged Infrared,
Lone pine tree somewhere in the Palouse of Washington State.
Photographed with a Zeiss Ikon Super Ikonta 530 using a red filter. The film is expired Konica Infrared 750 nm developed in Rodinal 1:50.
True to my penchant for having to "fiddle" with photography, I bought a used D90 and had it converted to take infrared pictures (www.kolarivision.com).
There's a big learning curve to do this, and it requires some considerable post processing, but it promises to be kind of fun. I took this photo in Arches National park. That's my green subaru, which stayed kind of green, and the white lines in the road stayed white, but the rest is messed up, lol. Going forward I will be posting more of this photo fun. I hope you like it, and I welcome your comments or questions if you're curious. There are HUGE variations in what can be done with these photos once they are taken.
For those of you already doing infrared, this was a full spectrum camera with a 590nm filter and no channel swap.
Sheep with lambs, with Torr Hill in the background.
Taken with an infrared modified camera. Colours created with a custom camera profile in ACR.
Reflections in Waterfowl Lake, Banff National Park, Canada
850nm filter on full spectrum converted Sony nex 5n
Edited in Photoshop CS5. Use level and the eyedropper. then reversed the colour mixer from red output channel 100 red to 100 blue. and then blue output channel from 100 blue to 100 red. then just mess around. Please comment
Storm Callum brought some moderate windage to the Peaks...5 seconds, 18mm , Nikon d7100...many thanks for looking :):)
shot with an olympus om-d e-m10 mark ii—720nm infrared converted—and the panasonic 20mm f/1.7 mark ii lens
Photographed in 665 nanometer infrared using an infrared modified Canon 20D and rendered in true color infrared.
an infrared long exposure of a flooded forest. Taken using a Hoya R72.
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Buy my landscape photography book here
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La rotonda del mio paese...
Leica IIIc (1941) + Summar 50mm f/2 (1938) + Rollei RPX 400 INFRARED + filtro Leitz IR (infrared) + esposizione regola del 16 aumentando di 5 stop