View allAll Photos Tagged fullspectrum
This was taken along the River Wey above Triggs Lock. Shot with a Full Spectrum converted Lumix DMC-G1 with a 590nm IR filter fitted on the lens. This image is a non-R-B swapped version of an earlier upload.
Ciutat de Barcelona.
Fotografia Infraroig (photography infrared).
Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).
Filtre IR 680nm.
Panoràmica de 16 preses verticals.
Coordenades Polars.
Josep Vidal.
Waipahu, Oahu, Hawaii
A couple of retired US Navy ships waiting it's faith.
Sony A7 (Full-Spectrum) | Zeiss Batis 25mm | Kolari Vision-IR Chrome
Ciutat de Barcelona.
Fotografia Infraroig (photography infrared).
Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).
Filtre IR 720nm.
Panoràmica de 6 preses verticals.
Josep Vidal.
Well, I was returning from a medium size hike in one of my favorite areas, ..being there first of all, but also exploring the IR properties of a contemporary nifty fifty. Doing simple things, single shots, or 3 and 5 piece panos with a normal tripod.
And this flock of relaxing cows - just chewing their stuff in the warm afternoon sun - crossed my path, I didn't want to startle them but they were already getting up when I came by, including this guy to the left.
Look at the size of that fella, look at the neck / back muscles; what a machine! And the cows always appear so content and zazzy up there. So naturally, I took some photos.
Sometimes I think to myself, that it wouldn't be the worst thing to be a cow up there, they have so much space, no noise, shelter if they want, they have their own natural water sources, forest and can wonder from one meadow to the next how they like it, and most of all, they have each other. There is a bull, cows with their calfs and they are out three seasons of the year doing their thing.
I bet they don't worry a lot too, they are certainly not in the trouble making business like we are, because I don't think they have egos or some fancy conceptual sense of themselfs, whatever you want to call it. *sigh* Anyway..
Nikon D90 (APS-C, fullspectrum mod)
AF-S NIKKOR 50mm f/1.8 G prime
Hoya R72 (720nm infrared pass-filter)
ISO200, 50mm, f/7.1, 0,5 sec
(thus 75mm full frame equivalent)
single shot, tripod, remote (ML-L3)
awfulsteelmelon@flickr:~$ apt-get moo
From early December, when I got the filter, perfect conditions for IR obviously, but I just had to go out, ..obviously. 😜
Wanted to see what this wavelength does to the fog, but somehow I ended up in a bubble of no fog / clouds while it was all around. This is my own sepia development, but frankly, it looked almost the same in real life, very bleak! I let you discern if or how much of the / our beloved IR features are present in the photo..
Nikon D3300 (APS-C / DX, fullspectrum mod)
Tamron 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5 Di ll VC HLD
heliopan Infrared RG 1000 (87A) 800x filter
ISO100, 13mm, f/8, 0.8sec (-0.3EV)
(therefore ~20mm FX / full frame equivalent)
tripod, 3-way head, remote (ML-L3)
Montjuïc.
Fotografía Infraroig (photography infrared).
Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).
Filtre IR 720nm.
Alright, what the heck: here is a b&w monochrome development of the full 360° panorama. With the lack of distracting (false) colors, I think the emphasis is more on the shapes and topography of the place, so I feel it's not too bad.
It's a pretty idyllic place, a forest enframed meadow, with the well-kept old farm house with fruit trees around, a small garden, wood stacks, outdoor toilet and just a small gravel track to it. Easy to get nostagic, but I know it wasn't all fun and games and beauty back in the day when this was the standard of living.
Yet sitting down on the bench under the weeping willow tree in the afternoon sun and just shutting up for a moment, even forgetting about IR photography, is a nice thing to do.. 😐
Source for this is a 421,6MP 360° 720nm IR panorama, consisting of 42 individual photos, just horizontally cropped to 27217 x 10778 px, ~293,3MP
Nikon D90 (APS-C, fullspectrum mod)
Tamron 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5 Di ll VC HLD
Hoya R72 (720nm infrared pass-filter)
ISO200, 24mm, f/6.3, 0,4sec
(therefore 36mm full frame equivalent)
tripod, panorama head, remote (ML-L3)
Vita building in Manchester shot with a full spectrum converted camera and a Kolari IR Chrome filter.
Thanks for looking 🙏😊
Cólliga.
Fotografia Infraroig (photography infrared).
Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).
Filtre IR 720nm.
Real time Light Painting - one single photographic frame - straight out of the camera
Meyer Optik Görlitz 35/2 @f5,6 on my Nikon D300 full spectrum conversion, IR 720 filter & IR torch for the skull. Removed the IR filter, some vape and modified light blue Convoy S2 for the backlight. Tripod and lens swap to the Sigma 14/2,8 @f8.
lightpaintingparadise.com plexy shape, adapter & colour filter & Ryu's Lightworks Edition V2 torch for the two Orbs.
Pont de bois ver l'ile Grosbois - Infrarouge - parc national des Îles-de-Boucherville
Wooden bridge to Grosbois Island - Infrared - Îles-de-Boucherville National Park
www.trolettiphoto.com/picture-of-the-day-photo-du-jour/h7...
810 NM - Full-Spectrum Camera - Fisheye
©2016 Steve Troletti - TrolettiPhoto.com
Yala National Park, Sri Lanka.
Fotografía Infraroig. - (photography infrared).
Espectre Complet. - (fullspectrum).
Filtre IR 630 nm. - (filter 630 nm).
HDR forquillat de 3 trets amb 2 passos EV - (braketing 3 shots with 2 EV step)
Photomatix - Photoshop - Topaz
More from 'that walk', sorry. That's where I actually turned around that day, well, not exactly, I turned left and had another detour into the forest and over a hill.
I have seen these houses and the chapel from the distance and other direction years ago and wondered, where and what that is? But I refrained to go further that day (it got late and also due to my foot) However, these structures are on the edge of a vast rural plateau stretching out ahead, isolated by a river in a canyon in the north. Might be a challenge to explore this on foot, ..one day.
Again, minimal processing! Shadows and highlights are a bit over top at times, but I feel there is something in it, a relationship I don't want to disturb, so I embraced and went with it.
Maybe, not yet, but one day, when I'm old and tired (from doing flashy false-color IR developments etc.), I convert myself a pro body, pop on a prime lens, the RG1000, ..and do just that, walk around (on a stick) and just stay monochrome, ..who knows?
Nikon D3300 (APS-C / DX, fullspectrum mod)
Tamron 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5 Di ll VC HLD
heliopan Infrared RG 1000 (87A) 800x filter
ISO3200, 24mm, f/6.3, 1/20sec (-0.3EV)
(therefore 36mm FX / full frame equivalent)
single photo, handheld, finally mobile again..
Taken on the River Wey near Ripley, Surrey. Taken with a Full Spectrum converted Lumix DMC-G1 with a 590nm IR filter on the lens. This has not been R-B swapped.
Taken with a newly converted full spectrum Lumix DMC-GF2, with a 590nm 'Goldie' filter on the lens. R-B swapped in CS6 then Processed in LR5.
originally shot with my full spectrum xt-2 using an 850nm filter. sixteen minute exposure using a metal halide grow light in my basement near the washing machine (in case you were wondering).
While travelling for about three weeks across Namibia we encountered some wonderful landscapes and wildlife. Here's an infrared shot of an acacia tree somewhere in the Kalahari. Acacias are abundant in the desert country, presenting green leaves even in de driest of conditions. The leaves and pods provide food for large animals like giraffe and elephants. Processed in Lightroom for the typical blue-purple look of my preference, obtained with a full spectrum converted camera with 590 nm filter. Your comments are welcome!
Okay, no masterpiece in terms of composition, but that's actually the single photo IRG algorithm (JW Wong et al.) I pulled off here.
www.flickr.com/photos/jw_wong/35117360304/
I think it's the first one I shared, took it end of February. I can't say I have the method down by any means, there are so many factors involved, I really would have to spend more / a lot of time with this to perhaps figure it out, but doesn't seem like it at the moment. At least that's one that turned out alright I guess, snow is neutral, the saturation of the trees (even in the shadow) is like, over the top in-your-face type of deal. 🔥
Technically it's a 4-piece panorama, plain cylindrical stitch, 10242 x 5666px, ~58MP. (Yes I do know, the UV cut-filter has most likely done nothing, but that's how I did it.)
Nikon D3300 (APS-C / DX, fullspectrum mod)
Tamron 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5 Di ll VC HLD
heliopan SH-PMC deep yellow 4x (15, G) filter
B+W 010 UV-Haze 1x MRC F-Pro filter
ISO100, 13mm, f/8, 1/250sec
(therefore 19,5mm full frame equivalent)
tripod, regular 3-way head, remote (ML-L3)
Barcelona.
Fotografía Infraroig. - (photography infrared).
Espectre Complet. - (fullspectrum).
Filtre IR 630 nm. - (filter 630 nm).
HDR forquillat de 3 trets amb 2 passos EV - (braketing 3 shots with 2 EV step).
Aurora HDR - Photoshop - Topaz
Filter IR CHROME.
Fotografía Infraroig. - (photography infrared).
Espectre Complet. - (fullspectrum).
Panoràmica de 3 preses verticals. - (Panorama).
Autopano PRO - Photoshop - Luminar Neo - Topaz.
Okay, so I could not resist to produce another crop of this IR pano I already made:
www.flickr.com/photos/197010762@N05/53133392197/in/dateta...
I dig this particular development, the color scheme and framing overall, the shadow from the trees in the foreground give a sense of 'looking out' into the beautiful open rural landscape, into the blazzzzing midsummer infrared sunlight.
Writing about improvements and failures recently, I more or less discovered now (after years) that the hybrid-focus approach with this 3-row panoramic layout is pretty much a blunder! I focus all manual, and the bottom row - the foreground - a bit closer than the middle and top line.
Turned out, that this not only makes it more error prone as well as more cumbersome, it is also inferior to a uniform infinity focus all the way through! My initial tests that brought that about were not wrong per se, but more of a special case and then one thing lead to another. Photography is a cruel mistress.
★ I just need to remind myself, that it was good enough so far, otherwise I would not have done it all, and that mistakes bring progress which is often uncomfortable but ultimately good, and finally, that nothing will ever be perfect, that's just the nature of things (resp. the mind)! May peace be with you..★
Technically, the source of this is a 36-piece mercator projection (trimmed 20791 x 12375px yielding ~257,3MP) that I cropped to 8:5 aspect ratio, 8851 x 5532px, ~49MP.
Nikon D90 (APS-C, fullspectrum mod)
Tamron 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5 Di ll VC HLD
Hoya R72 (720nm infrared pass-filter)
ISO200, 24mm, f/6.3, 0,5sec
(therefore 36mm full frame equivalent)
tripod, panorama head, remote (ML-L3)
Hoz del Huécar, Cuenca.
Fotografía Infraroig (photography infrared).
Especte Complet (fullspectrum).
Filtre IR 680nm.
Panoràmica de 6 preses verticals.
Josep Vidal.
This is another slightly odd panorama, it's a 360° multi-row thing: 3 rows with 14 photos each, makes 42 in total.
It was already afternoon, mid October, so the light and season were way past the prime for infrared. Which, together with the dark 720nm filter and the shadowy location, meant me ending up with a shutter speed of 30 seconds.
Including a couple of test shots and including a 30 second in-camera long exposure noise reduction per image, the result was an active recording time of 45min!
And I had to constantly dance around the tripod on sloping wet rock covered with leaves, because the D90's only remote sensor is on its front side but I also had to get myself out of the frame too. A single bump into the tripod and the pano would have been ruined, one slip, me and the whole rig would have landed in the stream. It was quite an interesting experience to say the least.
So what you see here is a monochrome development of the initial trimmed mercator projection with a resolution of 21828 x 12226px (~266,9MP).
I feel like sharing some context and technical background (for all you infrared and panorama aficionados out there):
Here is a "crystal-ball"-like projection, where one can see what's missing to a full spherical panorama:
www.flickr.com/photos/197010762@N05/52564488972/in/dateta...
Here is a display of the stitching work, and the two main crops I decided to make that look nice:
www.flickr.com/photos/197010762@N05/52564954771/in/dateta...
Here is a snapshot of the fullspectrum D90 at work in front of the waterfall:
www.flickr.com/photos/197010762@N05/52565484998/in/dateta...
Nikon D90 (APS-C, fullspectrum mod)
Tamron 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5 Di ll VC HLD
Hoya R72 (720nm infrared pass-filter)
ISO200, 24mm, f/6.3, 30sec
(therefore 36mm full frame equivalent)
tripod with panorama head, remote
I loved the curve of the main tree right in the center, and palm trees make such interesting subjects to false-color infrared shooting.
Full-spectrum Canon 6D
B+W 090 filter
Barcelona.
Fotografía Infraroig. - (photography infrared).
Espectre Complet. - (fullspectrum).
Filtre IR 630 nm. - (filter 630 nm).
HDR forquillat de 3 trets amb 2 passos EV - (braketing 3 shots with 2 EV step).
Aurora HDR - Photoshop - Topaz
La Barceloneta.
Fotografia Infraroig (photography infrared).
Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).
Filtre IR 680nm.
Josep Vidal.
So, ..for a change, some plain old facile stuff, very very simple. 😯
The mojo of the summer infrared panorama frenzy disappeared as sudden and complete as the summer itself did, not in the mood for photos for a good while, which is ..not a crime of course.
Was about to start a hike on the weekend and kinda kicked myself (mentally) to at least take a camera with me, just in case, but I was determined to not make it complicated, yet to remain faithful to my dear and near IR spectrum. So I dismantled the panorama rig, put the strap on (..the Nikon thong), popped my contemporary nifty fifty on, decided for 720nm only (AF works with this wavelength on the D3300) and switched my brain to monochrome.
It was a nice walk, some wind, some clouds, sun, clean air from all the rain, and back home on the computer, I succeeded in keeping it simple also, ..at least for a little bit. 😐
That's the result of a super old preset I made (LrC 3.4.1 and not with IR in mind): Plain stupid desaturation, no channel swap or WB adjustments at all!, basic tweaking (highlights, shadows, etc.) and subtle (non-split-y) split toning with something akin to an orange-ish yellow as finish. One click done.
I think it's okay, at least not a disgrace to the holy IR spectrum, it has the magic. But simple, basic, ..very straightforward (including randomness of the composition).
So maybe for folks eyeballing IR photography, yet a bit quenched regarding all the weird profiles white balance channel mutilation development shit: going monochrome in a rather simple way can yield something proper already. Or perhaps not, there is of course always the invitation / danger to make it full-on complicated and retarded right away too. 😜 Anyway..
Nikon D3300 (DX, fullspectrum mod)
AF-S NIKKOR 50mm f/1.8 G prime
Hoya R72 (720nm longpass filter)
ISO200, 50mm, f/7.1, 1/800sec
(thus 75mm full frame equivalent)
single photo, handheld, morning light..