Sometimes I think one of the delights of infrared color is that it can bring a subtlety of hues not found often elsewhere. Not quite pastel but certainly not loud. Here's a picture I made last week that kind of illustrates the point, I believe.
Join to see EXIF info for this image (if available)
And here's somewhat less subtle -- the 590nm X-E2 arrived a couple of hours ago (and the rain stopped and the sun came out, really; only thing missing was the choir of angels). So I made a quick picture. Lots more color to play with in 590!
Join to see EXIF info for this image (if available)
Should mention that the only post were auto white balance (camera white balance came off a white card) and channel swap. So this is as close to an OOC jpeg as one gets with IR.
And here's really unsubtle, also made with the 590nm body, but the lighting and location had changed and the gold was redder except in the area affected by direct sunlight.
Join to see EXIF info for this image (if available)
This is kind of fun. I shot looking down at the creek and am now surprised at the depth of color in the reflection. Infrared and bodies of water are always a little unpredictable, in my experience. This was shot at 590nm, and auto white balance and channel swap in the GIMP.
Join to see EXIF info for this image (if available)
I played with an image seen a few pictures above -- post processing IR involves a kind of zen (as does a lot of computer work) -- and here is the picture more as it should be, I think.
Join to see EXIF info for this image (if available)
One thing I'm learning is to bring down the highlights before tweaking exposure in general. With a little underexposure, the highlights in the clouds (mostly) don't blow out, but when the other elements of the picture are brought up, it can take the clouds right back out again unless they're suppressed first.
Here's another, taken a couple of hours ago at the lovely little village of Amesville, Ohio. I did the usual white balance and channel swap adjustments and, because it was shot with the 14mm Fuji lens tilted slightly upward, did a touch of perspective control (Shift-P in the GIMP) as well. I took a white balance reading off the sidewalk, because I didn't have a gray card with me. What surprised me is how closely everything except the foliage looks as it does in visible light.
Join to see EXIF info for this image (if available)
Here's the fog just starting to rise from the trees still in sunlight on the far side of the holler after a thunderstorm. Shot with the 590nm-converted X-E2.
Join to see EXIF info for this image (if available)
And here's a Polyphemus moth on a railing outside the Court Street Diner in Athens, Ohio. Shot in 590nm because that's the only body I had with me, and with the 14mm Fujinon because that's the only lens I had with me. The feet, yes, are mine.
Join to see EXIF info for this image (if available)
This site uses cookies to help personalize content and to keep you logged in when you join. By continuing to use this site, you are consenting to our use of cookies.