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I added the warm look to this Infrared shot because, as you know, infrared shots look pretty much like black and white, right out of the camera.
This whole infrared thing is not quite clicking for me yet, But after the money I spent on the Canon XTi conversion, I am not about to give up! lol ( : !
Photographed in 665 nanometer infrared using a infrared modified Canon 20D and rendered in channel inverted false color infrared.
First week without any rain in about 4 months :)
On Wednesday I managed to escape from work at lunch time and get out for a wee dander - I just loved the shape of the trees along the road :)
So so glad it's Friday and naturally enough my picture just HAD to have a fence :) :) HFF everyone!!! :)
Hope you are all well and those of you in Canada that are still up to your necks in snow are keeping warm :)
Thank you for the great comments on my previous uploads. I appreciate them so much :)
Using a full spectrum camera, I photographed this scene with a Tiffen Red filter and a polarizer set to 90 degrees rotation at 90 degrees of an angle away from the sun. The red filter which can also pass infrared, is my favorite type of filter for a full spectrum camera besides 850nm filters and IR-only pass filters mainly because of the beautiful colors that are possible. I might be able to invest in an interchangeable-lens system for full spectrum though, to get rid of the hotspot issue with this model of camera. I was thinking about using a BackBone Modified edition of GoPro action camera, using one that's somewhere between the Hero 4 and Hero 8 edition (Hero5, Hero6, Hero7) but might need to do extensive research into what lens exactly I might need for such a setup.
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This is an infrared capture of the reflecting pool on the Middleton Plantation in South Carolina, which goes back long before the Revolutionary War and is rich with history throughout that conflict and through the Civil War saw well. It has been restored where it could be, though two of the three main buildings were destroyed during the Civil War and in an earthquake some years after. The gardens, begun in 1741, are the oldest landscaped gardens in the United States. Worth a look, even in the dead of winter. Which for that area is in the 50s or 60s F. This is not snow or frost, it is strictly a refection of infrared light adding its magic.
shot with an olympus om-d e-m10 mark ii—720nm infrared converted—and the panasonic 20mm f/1.7 mark ii lens
Another Infrared shot, this time of a more regular location for me. Fort Baker view of the Golden Gate Bridge. Intentionally took it close to noon to get full sunlight. It was Ugly light, very haze, but the infrared cut through the haze well and got much more detail than I would have got with the regular cameras. Hardest part is since it initially comes out red on the playback, I have no idea what I have until I get home. But fun experimenting.
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