View allAll Photos Tagged Infrared,
This is my 3rd photo from the Ards infrared collection. Ards is in Donegal, Ireland. It is a beautiful spot you should not miss.
Infrared Landscape shot with Canon EOS 7D using a 590 nm converted infrared lens with Conversion by LifePixel
Abandoned farm implements near Wooldridge in Cooper County Missouri in infrared by Notley Hawkins Photography. Taken with a Canon EOS 50D camera with a LIfePIxel infrared conversion and a EF-S10-22mm f/3.5-4.5 USM lens at f.8.0 with a 1/25 second exposure at ISO 100. Processed with Adobe Lightroom 5.7.
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©Notley Hawkins
A simulated Ektachrome Infrared false-color image produced with an unmodified digital camera and an R72 filter.
More details on the equipment and technique, as well as free Photoshop actions which simplify the creation of both a monochrome infrared image and a false-color Infrared Ektachrome simulation, can be found at:
I found this old truck one day while driving around remote dirt roads and I decided to try an infrared shot. This truck was interesting because there was a bird's nest in the engine compartment.
(single exposure)
A digital infrared snap just prior to a thunderstorm. This light was put into service in 1803. She was seized by the British in the War of 1812 as they advanced towards Washington DC. Fort Monroe was built adjacent to the light to protect Hampton Roads, and Union Forces held the light during the Civil War. The lighthouse is now listed on the National Register of Historic Places.
DSC_2449-Panorámica
Modified infrared DSLR
IR 720 nm
Old chapel in the Bella Vista neighborhood of Riotinto. Consisting of a Victorian homes built in the late nineteenth century by the Riotinto Company Limited to host the management of the company.
37°41'51.4"N 6°35'50.2"W
Bought a Canon 1200D that had been converted to infrared and we finally got out there to see if we could get some shots. It was a very misty day. A lot of experimenting needed but am loving the dreamy quality of this shot.
Infrared Solutions Camera
This beauty was gifted to me by a friend and fellow photographer. It is a thermal camera used by contractors and scientists to see heat in the infrared spectrum. It is fairly large (see 6" ruler in the photo) and quite heavy and uses different wavelengths and has much higher sensitivity than photo infrared cameras, both digital and film.
It is a bit quirky and I'm not sure if I will be able to get images out of it but I have been having lots of fun working with it.
Check out the mirrored lens!
I took two strange photography concepts and put them together. I put a Holga pinhole toy lens on my Canon 50D that has been converted to Infrared. So now I have a infrared pinhole photo of trees on a pond in a park in Las Vegas, Nevada. Not very sharp, and has a lot of vignetting, but it's lots of fun.
you can buy my art at james-sage.pixels.com
The observatory shut down the day we went due to the outbreak. We were still able to walk around and check out the different telescopes they have. Great place to visit! Can't wait to go back after this subsides.
Taken in infrared with a 590 filter.
A moment of quiet reflection following the gruesome events in London yesterday evening. Taken on a pleasant walk with our friends Nick and Val around Stoke Lake returning via the cafe in Stoke Park for a nice cup of tea.
Thought I'd try a little IR at the local fair last night. It took some time to arrive at this result.
A simulated Ektachrome Infrared false-color image produced with an unmodified digital camera and an R72 filter.
More details on the equipment and technique, as well as free Photoshop actions which simplify the creation of both a monochrome infrared image and a false-color Infrared Ektachrome simulation, can be found at:
A quick and dirty shot during an afternoon walk.
camera: fullspectrum conversion
filter: Heliopan RG830
Pentax infrared tutorial [in german]