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There's a whole spectrum of light to experience through the magic of technology! Infrared: Infrared has a lot of applications too, from security to heat-seeing to night vision to astronomy! There are special filters and/or special film that will either let IR light in and/or block colored light or will let you false-color your images with IR. Ultraviolet: UV photography also has special filters or films available, but it seems to require more specialized equipment or modifications to your camera more of the time. You can either just let the UV in as white or false-color the image by mapping the different wavelengths to colors. It also has a lot of applications in things like forensics and astronomy. There is also UV fluorescence where an ultraviolet light causes visible light to be induced: In this case, you're more limited to what you can get under a blacklight and what actually fluoresces, but you don't need to modify your camera or buy anything special, as far as I can tell. Has anyone here taken any photographs outside the visible spectrum? What did you do to your camera to let you take them?
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# ? Nov 29, 2022 10:28 |
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# ? May 3, 2024 19:11 |
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Cool thread. I've never taken any shots worth sharing, but you can convert a crappy action camera into an IR camera just by removing the lens and popping off the IR cut filter (its a little square piece of glass, see below). Bonus, if you don't screw the lens back in enough it becomes a macro lens so you can take pictures of neat bugs. Results may not be great (and if you're thinking of using it for night vision, you're gonna need a powerful IR flashlight), but it's a fun thing to do with a camera if you don't use it anymore. Behold: my backyard (with a poorly-adjusted lens oops) Edit: here's another orange tree turned pink through the magic of invisible light Friend fucked around with this message at 21:13 on Nov 29, 2022 |
# ? Nov 29, 2022 18:27 |
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Nice thread, I look forward to seeing more. I need to shoot some IR film some time, looks like a great time.
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# ? Dec 1, 2022 10:51 |
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Matthieu Stern did a video series about this that got me interested in this but the price is a bit rough https://youtu.be/apLBMlTQwJc https://kolarivision.com/ I think this thread could benefit from like... posts about getting this effect in post if you're more interested interested in the aesthetic, even though it won't be the same
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# ? Mar 26, 2023 04:53 |
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It doesn't have to be expensive. You can buy an old camera body to convert for $100 or so, and IR filters are $50 to $100.
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# ? Mar 28, 2023 06:07 |
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# ? May 3, 2024 19:11 |
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TheLastManStanding posted:It doesn't have to be expensive. You can buy an old camera body to convert for $100 or so, and IR filters are $50 to $100. If you can live with the locked f/2 aperture, 5 megapixels, >1/30sec exposure time, Sony Cybershot DSC F-707, F-717, (both will take any 58mm thread-on filter) and some others will do "Night Shot" mode where a solenoid flips the hot mirror out of the way, and if you're lucky you can find them for $50 fairly often. I have a DSC-V3 as well, but the batteries and the special filter adapter tubes are expensive, and I've mostly been shooting a F707 with an aliexpress 950nm filter lately, which is definitely a sub-$100 setup. e: here's two examples from the weekend, visiting the unreleasable ravens at the wildlife recovery center. klezmer life yo fucked around with this message at 02:28 on Apr 10, 2023 |
# ? Mar 31, 2023 10:22 |