Infrared filters
Antonio Correia
Registered Users Posts: 6,241 Major grins
I was reading an English magazine announcing an Infrared Filter for digital cameras.
I think that using an IR filter, we can get infrared pictures without any modification of the camera.
I can remember I have done IR photography with slide film, but that was some 40 years ago...:wink
However, the magazine was saying that certain digital cameras have an IR blocking filter.
I have been googling for a while now and I could not find any information about this matter concerning the Canon 350 D the Canon 20 D or the Canon 5 D.
Using one of these cameras and an IR filter do I get IR photos ?:dunno
Thank you people ! :thumb
I think that using an IR filter, we can get infrared pictures without any modification of the camera.
I can remember I have done IR photography with slide film, but that was some 40 years ago...:wink
However, the magazine was saying that certain digital cameras have an IR blocking filter.
I have been googling for a while now and I could not find any information about this matter concerning the Canon 350 D the Canon 20 D or the Canon 5 D.
Using one of these cameras and an IR filter do I get IR photos ?:dunno
Thank you people ! :thumb
All the best ! ... António Correia - Facebook
0
Comments
http://dpfwiw.com/ir.htm
http://www.wrotniak.net/photo/infrared/
http://www.echeng.com/photo/infrared/
http://www.flickr.com/groups/d70ir/
Here is a shot with a Canon D60 that was converted to full time infrared. 12-24mm Tokina f/4. 1/200 second at f/11 ISO 200.
You can most certainly purchase IR pass filters that allow most dSLRs to produce IR images. The process can take a pretty long exposure and there may be other disadvantages like extra noise from the long exposure and focus and composition will be pretty much "blind" and guesswork. A tripod is almost certainly required.
If you want to pursue the method, the Nikon D70 has a relatively weak IR cutoff filter and it works pretty well with just an IR pass filter in front of the lens. (Most Canon dSLRs have a very strong IR cutoff filter and would not work very well for IR work unmodified.)
I purchased an older unmodified Minolta Dimage 7 digicam and IR pass filter and used it to take these images:
Note that these were originally mostly red tones and there has been considerable PS work.
To see if a particular camera works well without the IR conversion, see here:
http://heim.ifi.uio.no/~gisle/photo/ir.html
Moderator of the Cameras and Accessories forums
You gave me nice links.:D
I will ask Canon Portugal if they can remove the IR filter from the Canon 350 D in order I can use it always as an infrared camera with the corresponding filter, the Hoya R72 or the Wratten 89B.
Cuong
In fact here there is a lot of good and usefull links to lots of informationand possibilities.
Meanwhile, I found two threads of Andy - 1 and 2 - about this and my compatriot Rui Leal from Lighting Modes - whith whom I took lunch one of these days - gave me a link to the USA shops you just gave me and I mailed Canon Portugal asking if they could do the transformation.
Canon Portugal didn't care at all and gave me no answer.
They think ... well what do they think ?
Or do they think at all ?
I am going to mail Conon Spain because my problem is the Customs on the re-entry in the Community about paying taxes and so forth.
Thank you
also some taken from a plane here http://www.ogle.co.nz/gallery/3132401_knmSq#323890142_NxSTH
Thank you.
Yoy did yourself ! That is something I would never do because I would damage the sensor, I think.
Very nice pictures you have done !
The African bush with a Sony F707 in nightshot mode with an R72 and an ND8:
Bugs
Spiders
Flowers
I almost forgot to write you.
Thank you for the information but I never had the Sony.
I am going ahead with the modification of my Canon 350 D (US Digital Rebel).
Some more useful links on this subject here.
Here are a couple links that talk about IR: http://www.wrotniak.net/photo/infrared/ , and IR conversions: http://www.wrotniak.net/photo/infrared/slr.html , that you might find useful.
The topic covered by the 2nd link should answer your question in the other post. You can't just remove the anti-IR (lowpass) filter without replacing it with a clear or IR filter.
Cuong
If you are handy with a soldering iron and small sharp knives, then it's not too daunting.
Have a close read of this and if it excites you more then scares you then you might enjoy doing it yourself.
http://www.lifepixel.com/ir-tutorials/canon-rebel-xt-300d-digital-infrared-conversion-instructions.htm
One tip is to label each screw on a printout of the pictures and then to stick them on a long piece of sticky tape as you take them out and write on the tape as to what picture they came from.
I found it quite satisfying to mod it myself but not everyone is that geeky :devbobo
Bugs
Spiders
Flowers
D