View allAll Photos Tagged lifepixel
mais je ne sais pas trop ce que c'est
Bon dimanche
Judaspenning(merci Hans)
Monnaie du pape (Lunaria annua)merci Bernard.
2016 Worldwide Photowalk, Los Angeles County Arboretum. Made with a modified Nikon D70 with 720nm sensor IR filter.
Image was taken in Cades Cove in the Smokies. Camera was an Olympus E-PL5 converted to infrared by LifePixel.
Textured composite. Infrared original from Lower Arroyo Park in Pasadena, California combined with supermoon image. Processed with Lightroom, Photoshop texture layers and Topaz filters.
Huntington Botanical Gardens, Pasadena, California. Textured color infrared. Processed with Lightroom, Photoshop, Texture and Topaz filters.
infrared 720nm
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TUTO for infrared
www.lifepixel.com/tutorials/infrared-photoshop-basics
in french
The Katy Trail and Little Bonne Femme Creek Bridge in Boone County, Missouri. Photography by Notley Hawkins. Taken with a LifePixel infrared converted (590nm) Canon EOS R5 camera with a Canon RF24-105mm F4 L IS USM lens at ƒ/8.0 with a 1/100-second exposure at ISO 50. Processed with Canon Digital Photo Professional and Adobe Lightroom Classic.
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©Notley Hawkins. All rights reserved.
The 107-foot (33 m) Grays Harbor Lighthouse is the tallest lighthouse in Washington and the third tallest on the West Coast. It marks the entrance to Grays Harbor, which is one of Washington's few outer-coast harbors, and was first lit in 1898. Construction began in 1897, using plans drawn up by architect Carl Leick, at a site facing the Pacific Ocean about 400 feet (120 m) from water's edge. Massive amounts of accretion, due in large part to the jetty system at the entrance to Grays Harbor, have since built up, and the lighthouse now stands approximately 3,000 feet (910 m) from high tide.
Wikipedia
A multi-image panorama.
Canon Rebel XT (converted to Infra-red by LifePixel 830nm Filter) | Canon EFS 17-85
Image was taken in Cades Cove in the Smokies. Camera was an Olympus E-PL5 converted to infrared by LifePixel.
Taken this past summer with an IR converted Canon EOS400D.
All images copyright © Mia Lewis Images. All Rights Reserved.
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I rode out this morning on my ebike temperature colder than we've had so far this fall. About 35 degrees Fahrenheit. Being that cold I decided against taking a film camera with me. Instead I took my IR camera. When I arrived at Riverfront Park I found it fog-bound. Having an IR camera to take landscape photos in a fog is like taking a knife to a gun fight. Not the tool of choice because usually it cuts through what it is you're trying to photograph. But not always. In the above photo it cut through some, but not all of the fog. I’m pleased with the image. It sets a special mood.
There were no clouds visible to the human eye when I took this photo. Just a foggy haze which the IR camera cut through to reveal detailed high flying clouds.
Canon Rebel XT (converted to Infra-red by LifePixel 830nm Filter) | Canon EFS 17-85