View allAll Photos Tagged Infrared,
Canon F-1n, 50mm f1.8, Hoya R72 and expired Ilford SFX 200 (2009) shot at 25 iso and developed in Rodinal 1+50 for 10 minutes at 20C.
© Copyright John C. House, Everyday Miracles Photography.
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I have liked infrared photography since I was pretty young. The way light looks is a little magical to me. A few years ago, I had my first digital camera, a D70s, converted to shoot infrared. It did a pretty good job, but it was limited, since it was a D70s. Recently, I decided to have my D700, a more sophisticated camera, converted.
All infrared captures result in some pretty strange colors straight out of the camera. I generally do not leave any color in the images, instead converting to black and white. This particular kind of conversion (called hyper color) does a particularly odd number on the color. A little bizarre for me, but I kind of like it and thought I’d share what it looks like without converting to black and white.
Another one from the archives. Wonder what else is on my hard drive that I haven't found yet.
This one is a tree on the shores of Lake Pukaki.
K590 IR filter with Custom White Balance set to gray sidewalk. Adjustments in Pixelmator (Red/Blue swap), Luminar 4, and Photos. Photo by Derrick Story - www.thedigitalstory.com
I cannot take credit for this wonderful infrared picture. It was captured by fellow photography enthusiast Max Tiraquon who kindly allowed me to post it on this flickr stream.
Infrared 720nm.
Spastically playing with the 'false colors' by tinkering with color channel swapping and hue tinkering... don't ask me to replicate!