View allAll Photos Tagged fullspectrum

Same location as the b&w one I shared, but earlier. This afternoon was essentially "spontaneous cloud chasing", in infrared, very nice conditions.

The light was coming from behind here (although that's relative given the wide angle of the pano, from the left on the left side and from behind on the right), and all of a sudden, a solid cloud build itself up right in front of the sun. I was about to pack up and go home, really, cause "everything" was in the shade now, from my perspective at least. I didn't anticipate that just 75mm (FX) would zoom in on and highlight those still sunny batches in the distance that well. I also did those panos fast (and did not switch to other wavelength), cause the cloud was about to grow out of the 50mm frame (and 35mm was much too wide), but I was pretty dialed in at that point, used the Tamron 10-24mm and NIKKOR 28-50mm all summer. The latter is a pain to use for IR, but it's optically just too good not to.

Unfortunately this doesn't come through that much in the long-ish format. This would perhaps look nice as a wall-size print, like in the hallway of a (public) building, or subway, where one can walk by the landscape, literally.

Anyway, this one leans more towards the purple side of things, not too much red in there, I like that in a way. Other things I don't like, but I won't say.. 😜

  

Since Flickr officially killed the Help Forum (RIP!), there is a place where members continue to help each other, 😊 ..or at least try to:

★ www.flickr.com/groups/helpforum/ ★

  

Source for this is 9 piece panorama, 26013 x 5960px, ~155MP, no crop.

 

Nikon D3300 (APS-C / DX, fullspectrum mod)

Zoom-NIKKOR 28-50mm f/3.5 AI-S

heliopan SH-PMC deep yellow 4x (15, G) filter

ISO100, 50mm, f/8, 1/1000sec

(thuerefore 75mm full frame equivalent)

tripod, panorama head, remote (ML-L3)

infrared picture with a full spectrum + IR pass fileter of sea and sky (high contrast not as in visible light) and clouds (not visible by eye)

Taken in combined visual & infra red, giving some coulur changes especially in the teams black clothing.

clouds dwarfing the famous rock formations of Monument Valley, at the Arizona/Utah border. full spectrum converted camera, 590 nm filter, colours processed in Lightroom. comments and faves appreciated!

Hawkes Bay Wilderness

New Zealand

 

Lensbaby Sweet 35 on full spectrum Sony A7R

Los domingos, té danzante.

Los lunes desolación.

Parque Bruil.(Zaragoza)

Olympus EPL5 FullSpectrum 17mm F2.8 1/250" f/5.6 ISO200 680nm filter by zomei. 18/10/2020 PA182421

RESERVOIR 1 (long path, suffern bear mountain trail) - Composition Thursday

 

© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963

Monarch Cave Ruins, on a side canyon of Butler wash below Comb Ridge, close to Bluff and Mexican Hat, Southeastern Utah. Inhabited by Ancestral Pueblo people in Pueblo III times (c. 1150-1300 AD). There's wonderful rock art panels in an alcove to the right (outside picture). photographed many times, this may be the first in infrared/full spectrum post.... converted camera, 590 nm filter, colours processed in Lightroom. comments and faves appreciated!

HAVERSTRAW FROM THE HIGH TOR (a week of light spectrum double takes: infrared vs visible) - Composition Sunday

 

© Erik McGregor - erikrivas@hotmail.com - 917-225-8963

somewhere in the middle of France, full spectrum modified camera

This infrared photo reveals a cyclist pedalling away in haste from a rather sinister looking electricity pylon.

 

Shot on a converted full-spectrum camera using a 760nm IR filter.

Vertical stiched from three images

Images taken along the River Wey near Guildford. Taken with a Full Spectrum converted Lumix DMC-G1 with a 590nm IR filter on the lens. Processed in CS6 and LR5. This has been R-B swapped.

"Altered Vision"

Exhibit at Gallery 14, Hopewell, NJ

Oct 8 - 23, 2022

 

20220524_0001

Full spectrum Visable and IR

HDR 5 images QTPFSGUI

 

HDR, full spectrum, Redfield filtration. Samyang 7.5mm.

What it says on the tin !

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

Waialua, Oahu, Hawai'i

 

Something is definitely wrong with this coral head. Probably some type of coral disease?

 

Sony A7R III (Full Spectrum) | Sony 24mm GM | Kolari Vision-Hot Mirror Pro 2 | Seafrogs Housing

Ciutat de Barcelona.

 

Fotografia Infraroig (photography infrared).

Espectre Complet (fullspectrum).

Filtre IR 680nm.

Panoràmica de 6 preses verticals.

Technikai adatok:

Canon EOS 1100D fullspectrum

Astronomik UV/IR block filter

Skywatcher 72ED

x0,85 reductor

AZ-EQ6 GT

176*180s / ISO 1600

2025 09 20-22

Full Spectrum, no filter

apple store central world Bangkok

Sony A7 with Nikkor-O 35mm f2 and R820 filter

Microsoft Image Composite Editor, the stiching is a bit off

False color SD14 slow shutter no filter full spectrum

third post in my informal vertical "tree" shot series. ocotillo cactus(?) at Tonto National Monument on Lake Roosevelt, Arizona. full spectrum modified Nikon 1 V2, 590 nm infrared filter. i appreciate your comments and faves!

Kolari Pocket - Panasonic Lumix ZS20 full spectrum converted + 590nm infrared filter

B/W Landscape

Made with Fullspectrum Camera and a so called pop filter red (Hoya), probably from the 70ies or 80ies. Although this filter is red, obviously, it's not an IR filter. I don't have any specs. Pop filters were used to colorise to one single color on color-film. Not used like colored filters for B/W. Interestingly, this one does not show a too strong IR ("wood") effect, and also the sky is not getting almost black, but gets a middle tone. Overall contrast is high, though, but still it does not produce that IR look, but rather something B/W film like. It was the first try with this filter, obviously another abuse, In need to check out this more. Seems to be a way to get a quite natural looking B/W, or almost B/W image. Few more to come, I struggle with the processing of those a bit. If anyone has specifications for pop filters or knows more ... please let me know!

Inman Park, Atlanta, Georgia

This was taken with my full spectrum modified 1100D and 760nm infrared filter at the Great Ocean Road, Victoria, Australia before the storm moved in.

 

It is quite noisy when zoomed in despite the relatively low ISO, I am very tempted to have the same mod performed on my 6D.

Took this on the first 'nice' day after the prolonged and severe rain falls in August this summer (which unfortunately caused plenty of destruction as well as lamentation; it doesn't matter so much what kind of weather it is, there is a good chance that it will be extreme nowadays; thanks climate change!), by a stream obviously not too far away from where I live.

 

Even though there is not much of a downgrade or huge amounts of water, there are a couple of junctions with barriers in order to feed (presumeably small Francis or Pelton) turbines to generate some electricity, so there are short sections where there is usually less volume and flow until the 'used' water joins the original river bed again. But with the heavy rainfalls, they had to open the flood gates to some degree to keep the excess water going, which is what's happening here. It doesn't overly look like that due to the 'ultra wide' angle of view, but the water was just raging out there, with such a velocity, making some proper noise with hell of a drag that I thought my gear is going to fly off any second. But I was out of the splash / spray / mist zone of course.

  

Technically this is 360° 42 image mercator projection, trimmed to 27199 x 15266px, ~415,2MP.

It was an easy stitch on principle, due to lots of 'content', but there were just a trillion of tiny issues to fix, not only in the water as one might expect, and.. well, I felt compelled to fix them.

Also thought this is going to be part one of a 'two part series', but I'm not so sure anymore, not very enthusiastic about part two..

 

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, 1/4sec

(therefore 36mm full frame equivalent)

tripod, panorama head, remote (ML-L3)

A water-logged area of the nature reserve, adjacent to the River Wey just below Guildford. Taken with a full spectrum Lumix DMC-GF3 fitted with a 590nm IR filter on the lens.

The view over my garden fence... seen in a combination of UV, IR and visible light c/o a full spectrum converted Canon EOS M camera.

Sony NEX-5n with Voigtlander Color Skopar 21mm f/4 - Kolari Vision full spectrum conversion - Schott BG3 filter

Inman Park, Atlanta, Georgia.

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