View allAll Photos Tagged fullspectrum
Laberint d'Horta.
Ciutat de Barcelona.
Fotografia Infraroig (photography infrared).
Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).
Filtre IR 720nm.
Panoràmica de 2 preses horitzontals.
Josep Vidal.
Ciutat de Barcelona.
Fotografia Infraroig (photography infrared).
Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).
Filtre IR 720nm.
Panoràmica de 4 preses verticals.
Josep Vidal.
Infrared, shot with my DIY fullspectrum modified Lumix GH3, new 12-60mm lens and B+W 093 deep IR filter. Monochrome duotoned with the Agfa Optima 200 v.3 preset in RNI Films app on iPhone. Location: Jotunheimen, Norway.
More images from the Silent Pool and Sherbourne lake, on the Albury Estate near Guildford.
Taken on a miserable rainy day from under an umbrella with a full spectrum converted Lumix DMC-GF3 fitted with a 590nm infrared filter on the lens.
The lakes were flowing through heavily with the amount of water coming off the surrounding land.
Two beautiful sunsets in a row as it was raining on and off during the day, with clouds scattering at night.
Fuji X-T1 converted for full-spectrum photography with a 750nm IR filter. Was out scouting for bluebells for a planned outing Sunday morning when overcast conditions are forecast. The light might have been too harsh for bluebell photography this afternoon but it suited infrared work.
Old U.S. Highway 64, outside Zebulon, NC
Full Spectrum Conversion, Hoya R72 filter (Infrared)
Handheld NEX C3 Panoramic Mode
Across the south, major two lane arteries have been replaced over the last 50 years by great streaming ribbons of concrete, rushing us all to God knows where. In a parallel universe, these old cast aside roadways carry on, a hundred yards or maybe a mile to one side or the other. Alongside them are the crumbling remains of what once were bustling motels, stores and gas stations, bypassed by the modern age.
IR full spectrum 1
[English follows]
J'ai retiré le filtre IR d'un Sony NEX-3 usagé. Cela se fait sans soudure. S'agit d'être patient et de ne pas trop trembler. Il n'est pas non plus nécessaire d'ajuster la mise au point, qui se fait directement sur le senseur.
Pour l'IR conventionnel, je mets un filtre sur l'objectif.
I removed the IR filter from a used Sony NEX-3. There is no soldering to do. There is no need to adjust the focus either, because it is done directly on the sensor. What is needed, apart from small screwdrivers, is patience and no shaking.
For standard IR photography, you put a filter on the lens.
Inspiration:
erkinson.altervista.org/guida-per-smontare-una-sony-nex-3...
www.youtube.com/watch?v=dkrHCdp3E7k
...
This was a test shot to show what a 470 mn infrared filter looks like. I took a series of shots all from the same position, each one using a different lens filter on a full-spectrum converted Sony A55. They were taken behind my apartment on a walking trail bridge that leads to a park.
This image was taken in RAW and processed in Linux using RawTherapee.
Ciutat de Barcelona.
Fotografia Infraroig (photography infrared).
Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).
Filtre IR 720nm.
Josep Vidal.
Sony NEX-5N plein spectre + filtre Vivitar Cromo Blend Rouge - Bleu + pas mal d'édition
Ce filtre "vintage" polarise les couleurs bleu et rouge, et mieux encore, il transmet l'infrarouge!
_______________________
Sony NEX-5N full spectrum + Vivitar Cromo Blend Red-Blue filter + some editing
This vintage filter polarizes red and blue colors, and even better, it does transmit IR!
Badalona.
Fotografia Infraroig (photography infrared).
Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).
Filtre IR 720nm.
Panoràmica de 20 preses verticals.
Josep Vidal.
Colors Swapped with Khromagery Faux Color Photoshop Action & PP in Aperture
I find the 590nm IR filter I was using here very difficult to custom white balance. It does not balance well against a grey/white card, better against green vegetation.
"False Color" red/blue channel mixed JPEG from my DIY fullspectrum modified GH3 with B+W 090 Red+IR filter. The new Lumix 12-60mm zoom lens is perfect for infrared work. I haven't seen any hotspots or bad flaring as of yet. It's weather sealed too!
Canon EOS 5Ds full spectrum, Yashica DSB 28mm f2.8, 1/60s, f/8, ISO400, IR-filter 850nm.
Sölvesborg, Blekinge, Sweden
A few years ago I came across this scene in a friends Flickr stream and just had to find out more about it. My friend Mike and his wife had been staying at The Daffodil which can be seen at the waters edge to the right of the valley. The lake is Grasmere in the Lake District and from then to now we've stayed 3 times and just love the village and surrounding areas.
Unfortunately every time we've been the water on the lake has been very choppy but on this morning my wife woke me up at 6.50am to tell me the lake was like glass!
I was out of bed in a flash, grabbed the cameras and we drove as far around the lake as possible before running through the woods to get to this small beach at the base of Loughrigg Fell. The lake seems to stay calm then ripple over in phases so I just remained patient and took as many shots as possible.
We both just love Grasmere and dream of living there if we ever won the lotto, its just so beautiful! To the left of the valley you can see Helm Crag also known as the Lion & Lamb while to the right Dunmail Raise.
Since our first visit having never knew what fells were let alone climb them we've climbed quite a few to date including Grey Crag, Helm Crag, Loughrigg Fell, Lingmoor Fell and more recently on this visit in 4 days Haystacks, The Fairfield Horseshoe and The Langdale Pikes :D I couldve done with a week off after those 3 mind!
We cant wait to get back there in the future and conquer more with Crinkle Crags being at the top of the list.
In this shot I used my Panasonic G5 Infra Red camera with a B&W #090 filter which is 590nM within the spectrum. The shot isn't actually a panorama, but a crop of a single shot cropped.
Tech Info...
Panasonic G5 converted to Full Spectrum
Olympus M.Zuiko 9-18 f4-5.6 (Equivalent to 18-36mm on Full Frame 35mm camera)
Aperture Priority
f11
1/200
- 2/3 stop exposure compensation
ISO160
Filter...
B&W #090 (590nm Super Colour)
Processing Info...
I opened the RAW file in Adobe Camera Raw where I made some basics adjustments such as Lens correction to remove distortion.
After importing the file into Photoshop I opened Niksofts Silver Efex Pro 2 to convert the shot to mono. Once I was happy with the result I cropped the shot and used Tony Kuypers resize and sharpen for Facebook action before saving to upload to the web.
qwikLoadr™ Videos...
Snow Patrol | Open Your Eyes Official! • Vimeo™
fullSpectrum | part I [2.16.19] gwennie2006! • YouTube™
fullSpectrum | part II [2.16.19] gwennie2006! • YouTube™
fullSpectrum | part III [2.17.19] gwennie2006! • YouTube™
fullSpectrum | part IV [2.17.19] gwennie2006! • YouTube™
fullSpectrum | part V (veiled) [2.17.19] gwennie2006! • YouTube™
Blogger GrfzDziner | Excuse Me while I Kiss the Sky...
GrfxDziner.blogspot.com/2019/02/excuse-me-while-i-kiss-sk...
5 parts here too...
blogger gwennie2006 | Presents of Angels 4Amber!! [part I]...
gwennie2006.blogspot.com/2018/03/presents-of-angels-part-i...
blogger gwennie2006 | Presents of Angels 4Amber!! [part II]...
gwennie2006.blogspot.com/2018/03/presents-of-angels-part-ii...
Blogger GrfxDziner | Presents of Angels 4Amber!! [part III] Hook...
GrfxDziner.blogspot.com/2018/04/presents-of-angels-part-iii...
Blogger GrfxDziner | Presents of Angels 4Amber!! [part IV]...
GrfxDziner.blogspot.com/2018/04/presents-of-angels-4amber-iv...
blogger gwennie2006 | Presents of Angels 4Amber!! [part V]...
gwennie2006.blogspot.com/2018/04/presents-of-angels-part-v...
River Wey just below Guildford in full flood after repeated rainstorms. Taken with a full spectrum Lumix DMC-GF3 fitted with a 590nm IR filter on the lens.
This is the tow-path just above the lock-keeper's house. You can see where the water has come above the lock and washed across into the adjacent non-navigable river cut (on the right) that bypasses the lock. The banks had only just been built up a few months ago.
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.
Ok, so I could not leave it alone, and went out (immediately) to do some more test shots with the first IRG attempt Aerochrome setup.
Again, did not follow Wong's algorithm, but mangled the photos on my own in some way.
The response is pretty weird, some vegetation stays kind of green (but with some red or pink in there which makes it darker and a bit brown-ish), but withered grass, dry leaves on trees, on the ground (brown stuff mostly) get pretty intense; also actual red or organge things that are not organic reflect very strong.
It was overcast so everything is a bit muted and there was no way of getting to this bright pink look with this "method".
I did use a different UV filter, not expecting to make any difference, and it didn't. There is all this talk about altitude, that there is more UV radiation (which makes sense to me, less atmosphere to pass through), but why the heck should that matter for a cut-filter? It does it's thing at a certain wavelength, with a transmission curve of a certain shape and threshold etc., and ..
Anyway, I already identified some major errors with my approach that a doable, and then probably some more on top of it 😜, stay tuned..
Technically, it's a 7 piece pano, cylindrical stitch, finished off with 14663 x 4256px, ~62,4MP.
Nikon D90 (APS-C / DX, fullspectrum mod)
Minolta MD ROKKOR 28mm f/2.8 prime
Fotodiox Pro MD - Nik adapter
BEWETAR 49 ES UV-haze 1x filter
KOOD 49mm YELLOW filter
ISO200, 28mm, f/8, 1/250sec (-0.7EV)
(therefore 42mm full frame equivalent)
manual focus, tripod, 3-way head