View allAll Photos Tagged Infrared,
... nearby the Airport Stuttgart.
Germany. City of Stuttgart. Harvesting season. Late afternoon shot. Long infrared shadows. Cloudy sky but infrared illumination from behind. Nikon D40. 720nm IR Filter. f/8. ISO 200. 18mm. 1/200sec. Red Blue channel swap.
Converted: full spectrum
Filter: Cokin red (003) and cokin blue (80a)
Thank you very much to all for your comments!
Whitchurch-Stouffville Museum & Community Centre 46th Annual Antique & Classic Car Show - Stouffville, Canada - August 2019
`720nm infrared, processed in Photoshop and Nik Color Efex Pro 4. Photographed in far western Colorado near the Utah border.
shot with an olympus om-d e-m10 mark ii—720nm infrared converted—and the 14-42mm electric zoom (ez) kit lens
Taken with the Helios 44M-7 at F11 plus a 720nm infrared filter. Skies are much brighter today, more IR light is coming through and the exposure time can come down a bit. I am getting better at IR focussing (close-ups are still tricky). This IR image is not "better" than those I took with visible light, it is just different. It shows the bio-luminescence of the plant, otherwise not visible.
shot with an olympus om-d e-m10 mark ii—720nm infrared converted—and the 14-42mm electric zoom (ez) kit lens
Waipio, Oahu, Hawai'i
Out in nowhere and I find a Mylar balloon hanging from this leafless tree branch. Mankind's footprint is too large.
Sony A7R III (Full Spectrum) | Sony 24-70mm GM II | Kase-720nm Clip-In
OK, it's an infrared photo. No artificial light, just the one coming through the window. I have even gone to the limits of what you can technically do with a screw-on IR filter (portrait photo for example). Yes, it's possible. And yes, green leaves are standing out and the whole image gets this unusual appearance. And beyond that? I am still struggling with the 'photographic identity' of IR. Fuji X-Pro1.