View allAll Photos Tagged fullspectrum

Cólliga, Cuenca.

 

Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).

Sense Filtre.

Panoràmica 360º

Projecció Estereogràfica.

Pfff 😮‍💨, ..not sure what was up with this one. I somehow doubt that there isn't a nice frame or pleasant development in there, in these sources, but I just wasn't having it. The mojo left me 😧, it felt a bit like work, so I presume it is me resp. my approach right now. So I just did it, ..moving on to other things.

 

It's part 16 of the "lost gorge series", the place where it got narrow again and before the steep last section started. I've already done / developed the money-shot of that, I have a few experimental panos left (not sure about these), and a final closing / related one (that's also finished) and then this gorge thing is done, finally. 😎

  

Source for this pano is a 27 photo mercator projection, ~282,9MP, cropped to 8:5 ratio with 18308 x 11442px.

 

Nikon D90 (APS-C, fullspectrum mod)

Tamron 10-24mm f/3.5-4.5 Di ll VC HLD

Hoya R72 (720nm infrared pass-filter)

ISO250, 24mm, f/6.3, 0,6sec

(thus 36mm full frame equivalent)

tripod, panorama head, remote (ML-L3)

Provided some SAG support for my friend yesterday. She didn't really need me so I did a little photography.

Dungness Lighthouse - shot in InfraRed - 720nm on Sony A7 full spectrum.

Genting Highlands, Pahang, Malaysia.

 

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)

 

Photoshop - Luminar Neo - Topaz

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. All rights reserved

I thought, hey, do you mind, I'm doing the pictures around here ... what a cheek :-) !!

Taken at Bowers Lock on the River Wey, Surrey, with a full spectrum converted Lumix DMC-G1 with a 590nm IR filter on the lens.

Wake Forest, NC

 

Full Spectrum Conversion, Hoya R25A filter (Infrared)

Deep Spain.

 

Fotografía Infraroig. - (photography infrared).

Espectre Complet. - (fullspectrum).

Filtre IR 680 nm. - (filter 680 nm).

HDR forquillat de 3 trets amb 2 passos EV - (braketing 3 shots with 2 EV step)

 

Photoshop - Luminar Neo - Topaz

Alright, this is a recent one, from the last heat period, did some hiking (with my tripod + camera on my shoulder) and 'sampling', meaning taking my panos in currently all (to me) available wavelengths for future development (when I move my new system out of the VM one day).

 

Amongst other things, this is quite a popular place for paragliding resp. flying all sorts of weird things, due to the features present (infrastructure, lots of altitude difference (~1400m), thermal lift, etc.). So there is a 'silent airport' nearby, a spot where many glider pilots take off during the day, so it's easy and fun to watch them start and soar through the sky. I was just done setting up my gear and was in the middle of the first pano, which is usually 510nm, when I noticed the tandem glider coming right at me (they don't make any noise). They came pretty close, but this is wide, 24mm!, made a left turn into the wind and then I snapped along as they fit nicely into the frames / positions of my pano head. Even thought they sometimes swirl around there like bees around a honey pot, it's still a happy accident to get one close and right in front an ultra wide lens on a pre-arranged panorama setup! Would have been cool to get even more shots, there is a proper chunk of panorama left on the left side, but that's just cocky; so I cropped in order to make the 'serial glider' bigger / visible yet retain some of the airi- and openness of the place.

Some light sun ray showed up as well, didn't expect that since I could not see them with the naked eye. Will be interesting to see, if they show up more clearly with longer wavelength? Anyway, due to this serendipity (I did a second one; same filter but without the glider) and the fact that I can do 510nm in my old productive system, I had to develop it, and here it is.

  

Source for this is a 8 piece panorama, 22720 x 5832px, ~132,5MP, which I cropped to a still panoramic format with 12456 x 5832px, ~72,6MP.

 

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

ISO100, 24mm, f/8, 1/640sec

(thus 36mm full frame equivalent)

tripod, panorama head, remote (ML-L3)

Atenas, Grecia.

 

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

Deep Spain.

 

Filter IR CHROME.

Fotografía Infraroig. - (photography infrared).

Espectre Complet. - (fullspectrum).

HDR forquillat de 3 trets amb 2 passos EV - (braketing 3 shots with 2 EV step)

 

AuroraHDR - Photoshop - Topaz

Please don't use this image on websites, blogs or other media without my explicit permission. All rights reserved

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

Ciutat de Barcelona.

 

Photography Infrared.

FullSpectrum.

Filtre IR 720nm.

Panoràmica de 5 preses verticals.

 

Josep Vidal.

Taken on the River Wey near Guildford, Surrey. Taken with a Full Spectrum converted Lumix DMC-G1 with a 590nm IR filter on the lens. This image has not been R-B swapped.

I want to deviate from my usual infrared panorama ways a little bit.

 

The original of this is a composite of 7 individual photos, shot in portrait orientation with a plain cylindrical arrangement, yielding 17241 x 4562px which is about ~78,7MP.

What you see here is just a section, around 64,5MP, since there is no point in sharing such a wide panorama on Flickr without proper means to view it.

 

I like the looong shadows over the fields, made by the trees and hills themselfs. The hardwood trees are colorless, since it was early March and there ain't no leaves in March..

 

This is another example of how gradually the IR response of the flora fades away with distance, I think that quite neat, and the way it is out there, I haven't desaturated or edited anything here.

 

And by the way: This was done with the arguably "worst NIKKOR ever made", according some. Granted, this is the third iteration, the AI version which doesn't seem to compare to the earlier Auto, C or K versions (all pre-AI). I think it's great performer, with visible light, but also on the near IR spectrum where it surprisingly peaks at a rather small aperture, f/11, which is no problem since there is hardly any hotspot to be found and also makes for a larger DOF, ..so very nice for landscape.

  

Nikon D90 (APS-C, fullspectrum mod)

Zoom-NIKKOR 43-86mm f/3.5 AI

Hoya R72 (720nm infrared pass-filter)

ISO200, ???mm, f/11, 2,5sec

(so 64,5-129mm full frame equivalent)

tripod, regular head, remote (ML-L3)

image taken with a Sony A7C fullspectrum and Leitz Elmarit-M 28mm f2,8 IR 550nm

Alarcón.

 

Fotografía Infraroig (photography infrared).

Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).

Filtre IR 720nm.

Panoràmica de 7 preses verticals.

Deep Spain.

 

Fotografía Infraroig. - (photography infrared).

Espectre Complet. - (fullspectrum).

Filtre IR 680 nm. - (filter 680 nm).

HDR forquillat de 3 trets amb 2 passos EV - (braketing 3 shots with 2 EV step)

 

Photoshop - Luminar Neo - Topaz

Colors reversed with Khromagery PS Action and tweaked in Aperture.

Not long before sunset, nothing too crazy, well ..I guess I'm still not used to coniferous trees going off like that, in flat winter light.

 

Do you find the fault here? First I was thinking, ..what happened? And actually tried to fix it, which is silly (when knowing the reason).

Spoiler: The wire of the fence got brutally chopped up by parallax error, since it's very close and I did not use my panorama head :-/

 

Technically it's a 7-piece panorama, plain cylindrical stitch, 19404 x 5611px trimmed, down to 97MP.

 

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, 20mm, f/8, 1/250sec (-1.0EV)

(therefore 30mm full frame equivalent)

tripod, regular 3-way head, remote (ML-L3)

More multi-row panoramic color infrared "classic winter landscape" - style weirdness? ..yess. 😊

 

This one is a composite, build from 24 individual photos, with a cut equirectangular projection that produced ~173,6MP, then cropped to 8:5 with 16297 x 10186px = 166MP.

  

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, 0,6sec

panorama head, tripod, remote

Its been a great summer in the UK so far for infrared photography ! Bright days and great skies !

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 on the River Wey near Guildford, Surrey. Taken with a Full Spectrum converted Lumix DMC-G1 with a 590nm IR filter on the lens. This image has been R-B swapped.

A misty sunrise amongst the trees. Taken using Kolari's IR chrome filter.

 

eddallenphotography.com

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Moody clouds over the rooftops as the few hours of invigorating sunshine we got this morning fade back into the grey abyss. More rain on the way !

Full spectrum GF3 with a 590nm filter on the lens. R-B swapped.

Deep Spain.

 

Filter IR CHROME.

Fotografía Infraroig. - (photography infrared).

Espectre Complet. - (fullspectrum).

HDR forquillat de 3 trets amb 2 passos EV - (braketing 3 shots with 2 EV step)

 

AuroraHDR - Photoshop - Topaz

La Alhambra, Granada.

 

Fotografia Infraroig (photography infrared).

Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).

Filtre IR 720nm.

Panoràmica de 5 preses horitzontals.

 

Josep Vidal.

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 R-B swapped.

Galle, Sri Lanka

 

Fotografía Infraroig. - (photography infrared).

Espectre Complet. - (fullspectrum).

Filtre IR 630 nm. - (filter 630 nm).

 

Photoshop - Luminar Neo - Topaz

Ciutat de Barcelona.

 

Fotografia Infraroig (photography infrared).

Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).

Filtre IR 720nm.

 

Josep Vidal.

Ciutat de Barcelona.

 

Fotografia Infraroig (photography infrared).

Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).

Filtre IR 720nm.

Mosaic de 2 preses verticals.

Well, this is just a couple of minutes more into a longer hike; this is around the corner where I took this one, only with more view:

www.flickr.com/photos/197010762@N05/52670864256/in/dateta...

 

That weird thing is a semi-monochrome 360° infrared (wavelength 720nm) panorama (1,7:1) with a resolution of 22278 x 12577px, ~280,2MP (trimmed mercator projection stitched from 42 individual photos).

 

It's always fun to discover what objects or parts of the landscape provide some IR false-color to work with, and which don't. Also I've noticed that 'colors' fade out with distance, it seems that some wavelengths are more readily absorbed in certain environments.

Like with normal telephoto landscape images, often things get more blue-ish with distance, or underwater, the first color that disappears is red. Not sure if it's an apt analogy..?

 

Even though it's not that prominent in this image, the 'sunstar' or flare with this fullspectrum D90 is totally different compared to the visible spectrum for some reason. Often a kind of a dot matrix is visible, not sure why.. but I like it, it's interesting at least and fits in with the weird surreal character of infrared photography generally, I find :)

  

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, 1/3sec

panorama head, tripod, remote

Taken from a ~298MP panorama, cropped to 8:5, 7463 x 4665px ~34MP, some mystery development.

  

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, 1sec (+0.7EV)

tripod, panorama head, remote (ML-L3)

It appears that, being out with a camera and climbing through and over fences and stuff is something that just goes together for me. I do, or have to do it a lot!

That's what this experimental pano is, literally IN the fence and thicket that seperates two steep meadows. I'm still surprised how well my manual tested-out infrared infinity focus with the Tamron works, the panoramic view is totally misleading here, I'm in the bushes essentially, how the depth of field (24mm, f/6.3 on DX) goes to infinity and captures the branches and ground close by is really weird.

There was also some wind, which usually means one of two things: Just executing the pano and it is what it is, or thinking about it and adjusting on the fly. Sort of planning the sequence according to the sun, cloud movement etc. then adjusting as I go, e.g. redoing certain segments I know were affected by wind right in the middle, cause waiting for 'the perfect moment' is futile most of the time and likely leads to frustration.

That's why it's best to stitch all the projects and make previews (quick and dirty) as soon as possible, so that I have these things still in memory. Reconstructing the mess later on can be a lot of unnecessary effort.

  

Source for this pano is a ~200° field of view, 33 piece, ~343,8MP mercator projection, down to 8:5 with 13279 x 8300px and about an 160° angle.

 

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, 1/2sec

(therefore 36mm full frame equivalent)

tripod, panorama head, remote (ML-L3)

In Training since 1954, gift to the National Arboretum by John Y. Naka in 1984

Sony A3000 Full Spectrum Converted with 720nm IR filter

55 - 200mm lens

PP in Photoshop

 

These trees are commonly seen at Mt Buffalo, VIC, Australia. I believe they stand from the remains of forrest fires that swept thru with new growth coming up from below. Taking the photo in IR black and white they really pop out of their surroundings. I waited till morning light to hit this hill and as the sun was behind me I knew the sky in IR world would be black thus contrasting the white dead trees....It work out as to the plan, which is not always the case as we all know ; )

Panorama from four images.

Colors Swapped with Khromagery Faux Color Photoshop Action.

Deep Spain.

 

Fotografía Infraroig. - (photography infrared).

Espectre Complet. - (fullspectrum).

Filtre IR 680 nm. - (filter 680 nm).

HDR forquillat de 3 trets amb 2 passos EV - (braketing 3 shots with 2 EV step)

 

Photoshop - Luminar Neo - Topaz

Ciutat de Barcelona.

 

Lensbaby Sweet 35 Optic

Fotografía Infraroig. - (photography infrared).

Espectre Complet. - (fullspectrum).

Filtre IR 630 nm. - (filter 630 nm).

Deep Spain.

 

Fotografía Infraroig. - (photography infrared).

Espectre Complet. - (fullspectrum).

Filtre IR 680 nm. - (filter 680 nm).

HDR forquillat de 3 trets amb 2 passos EV - (braketing 3 shots with 2 EV step)

 

Photoshop - Luminar Neo - Topaz

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