first time posting with IR
JAG
Super Moderators Posts: 9,088 moderator
Ok I do not have an IR camera or lens filter. I have been interested in this technique for quite some time but figured I would never get a chance to get the proper equipment needed to get the results.
Then today I was playing around with different filters in PSP X2 and ran across an Infared filter that I had overlooked in the past. I began playing with this image of Eklutna Lake, Alaska that I took during a shoot a couple weeks ago....
I had copied and pasted a new layer of the original image and faded it some as I felt that the IR filter took some of the interesting points of the picture out...such as the sky was too dark. I faded that layer over the IR image and erased the mountains to not include the color and got this...
I found this facinating but wanted to take it a step further...I found another filter that I hadn't touched in years called Visman>Arora Dectector. Applied to the above picture this is the results....
CC is appreciated. Do you feel that I have synthisized the IR action enough? Do the colors work well with this image? Thank you for looking!
Then today I was playing around with different filters in PSP X2 and ran across an Infared filter that I had overlooked in the past. I began playing with this image of Eklutna Lake, Alaska that I took during a shoot a couple weeks ago....
I had copied and pasted a new layer of the original image and faded it some as I felt that the IR filter took some of the interesting points of the picture out...such as the sky was too dark. I faded that layer over the IR image and erased the mountains to not include the color and got this...
I found this facinating but wanted to take it a step further...I found another filter that I hadn't touched in years called Visman>Arora Dectector. Applied to the above picture this is the results....
CC is appreciated. Do you feel that I have synthisized the IR action enough? Do the colors work well with this image? Thank you for looking!
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Cuong
Anyone know a good place to read up on this?
Cuong
Thanks for the info Cuong, and the links!
http://www.irleague.com/gallery/5351357_i3weC
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Cuong
Hi there, quite new to this forum so still finding my way about - I use a Nikon D100 that was converted to Infrared by Advanced Camera Services in the UK. http://www.advancedcameraservices.co.uk/
Faux - false infrared in Photoshop is easily achieved by various free Photoshop Actions on the web. But I find they do not truly reproduce a true Infrared shot. My internal filter was replaced by a 720 nm filter and the focus adjusted as well. Certain cameras are not suitable for conversion.
If I use auto WB then the in camera shots have a strong magenta cast. I normally use a custom WB - point at green grass in bright sunlight and set WB accordingly. Very occasionally I set for Blue Sky - point at very blue sky and set. The resultant in camera shots are quite different, more like B&W with some colour thrown in, blues and browns. In the old days, (I've only been taking pictures for 55 years) I developed quite a good eye for B&W - with Infrared forget it, you are depending upon the absorption or reflection of Infrared rays for the result and these can vary by the minute so each picture is a voyage of discovery. To help you along there are again many Photoshop Actions on the Web - why re invent the wheel? Some are automatic, some take you through each stage and give you manual control of the process as you go along. One of the best I've found is by Alexandra Morrison, Canadian Photographic Artist 2009 at her web site nature-photography-central
http://www.nature-photography-central.com/about-nature-photography-central.html
JAG, your picture 2 could possibly be mistaken for an Infrared shot, but does not quite make it. I like the effect in three, but it is definitely not IR.
Hope all this helps.
Andy Miller
This is an Infrared Panorama shot, taken with a converted Nikon D100 and a 17-35 mm f2.8 Nikkor. ISO 200; f5; 1/3000; Focal length 25 mm. Custom White Balance - grass.
It is made up of three frames which were merged using AutoPano Pro. The cropped image was then subjected to Alex's Landscape Actions in Photoshop CS4. ( See her section on Photoshop Actions )
That's a nice action, thanks for the tip!
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