View allAll Photos Tagged fullspectrum
James Hansen warms up for Autodesk's Ideas Cage Match. TED2012: Full Spectrum. February 27 - March 2, 2012. Long Beach, CA. Photo: Ryan Lash
Reid Hoffman at TED2012: Full Spectrum. February 27 - March 2, 2012. Long Beach, CA. Photo: James Duncan Davidson
Shot on a blustery afternoon capturing one of the very few brief dashes of sunlight. #infrared_images #infraredphotographer #infraredphotography #infraland #infraredworld #infraredcolour #infraredcolor #infraredlandscape #digitalinfrared #incredibleinfrared #fullspectrum #fullspectrummod #fullspectrummodified #fullspectumphotography
Rafe Esquith and students at TED2012: Full Spectrum. February 27 - March 2, 2012. Long Beach, CA. Photo: James Duncan Davidson
TED Fellow Meklit Hadero at TED2012: Full Spectrum. February 27 - March 2, 2012. Long Beach, CA. Photo: James Duncan Davidson
Social Spaces at TED2012: Full Spectrum. February 27 - March 2, 2012. Long Beach, CA. Photo: Robert Leslie
Improv Everywhere performance at TED2012: Full Spectrum, February 27 - March 2, 2012. Long Beach, CA. Photo: James Duncan Davidson
Canon 1100D Fullspectrum CLS CCD Tecnosky 70/420 ED 1X;
Orion Starshot Autoguider; Skywatcher AZEQ5
ISO 3200 - Exp: 2h30' (75*120"); Darks & Flats & Bias
Siena, 15/09/2020
Social Spaces at TED2012: Full Spectrum. February 27 - March 2, 2012. Long Beach, CA. Photo: Robert Leslie
Social Spaces at TED2012: Full Spectrum. February 27 - March 2, 2012. Long Beach, CA. Photo: Robert Leslie
Fuji S600fd full spectrum mode
found these growing on the grounds of a Buddhist temple near a train station called Hase
Kelly
TED2012: Full Spectrum. February 27 - March 2, 2012. Long Beach, CA. Photo: James Duncan Davidson
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!
Trees etc. / Fullspectrum Experiment:
I know, I should not post so many pictures at one time, this reduces the chance anyone looks at anything but the first. But ... well, I can't help it.
I carried the fullspectrum camera with me today, and stacked 3 filters on top of the Minolta 50-135/3.5 lens: A UV-IR Cut, a warming filter and an UltraContrast 0.5. This way I got RAWs with almost no blue, a lot of warm tones and muted greens. I did some digital post processing, but the basic „color grading“ was done while I took the photos, thus analog.
Possibly this is dumb artsy talk, but I find many of these have a certain „presence" that is hard to explain. The lens was used wide open, mostly.
Along this track that I walk so often right now there's little more than trees and what you see here, so I need to make something out of that. I think this little series showed me again, there is potential and birch trees are always the photographers best friends.
Bill Bragin chats on the grass at the Google Garage during TED2012: Full Spectrum. February 27 - March 2, 2012. Long Beach, CA. Photo: Ryan Lash
Jack Choi at TED2012: Full Spectrum, February 27 - March 2, 2012. Long Beach, CA. Photo: James Duncan Davidson
As spring begins, follow me through a caged bridge, along a countryside patch, then to dance upon a deserted dock. Photos by @Asphyx9
Getting ready to turn DNA into a symphony at Social Spaces (hear it! www.gene.com/ted/ ) at TED2012: Full Spectrum. February 27 - March 2, 2012. Long Beach, CA. Photo: Robert Leslie
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!