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Archive 2020 · Yosemite - Washburn Point Infrared

  
 
moondigger
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p.1 #1 · p.1 #1 · Yosemite - Washburn Point Infrared


Second attempt... I think I have the issue with the image hosting site worked out now. (I was going to post this after subscribing to upload & sell, but I subscribed on Friday and it hasn't been activated yet...)

I lucked out to get decent weather on the only day I could visit Yosemite in October of 2016 while I was in California for work. (There was steady rain the day before and the day after.) I shot this with my 590 nm IR converted 5D II with the Canon 50/1.8 STM, a five or six image stitch.

Because of the unusual amount of rain that came that year after a long period of drought, Vernal and Nevada Falls were flowing unusually well for October.

The color palette I picked for this is inspired by the colors that Kodak EIR false color infrared film delivered, back when it was available.




Jun 14, 2020 at 10:48 AM
moondigger
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p.1 #2 · p.1 #2 · Yosemite - Washburn Point Infrared


Nobody has an opinion on this? Like it? Hate it? Indifferent? I am genuinely interested in feedback...

Here are a couple of black & white conversions... maybe they will spark some comments?

Conversion emphasizing the infrared 'look' --



Conversion emphasizing a more traditional look --




Jun 16, 2020 at 08:47 PM
IShootThings
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p.1 #3 · p.1 #3 · Yosemite - Washburn Point Infrared


Boy, i haven't taken my infrared camera out in a while. I think the red edit is interesting and definitely different. It looks kind of other wordly. I'm interested to know how you edited it, I'm only educated in the basic white look when it comes to infrared.

I'm not much of a fan of the other two edits, they aren't bad but seem a bit too busy for my liking.



Jun 16, 2020 at 11:13 PM
moondigger
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p.1 #4 · p.1 #4 · Yosemite - Washburn Point Infrared


Thanks for your comments, IShootThings.

IShootThings wrote:
Boy, i haven't taken my infrared camera out in a while. I think the red edit is interesting and definitely different. It looks kind of other wordly. I'm interested to know how you edited it, I'm only educated in the basic white look when it comes to infrared.


My camera has a 590 nm infrared conversion, which means it allows a significant amount of the red-end of the visible spectrum through in addition to the infrared wavelengths. Do you know what cutoff the infrared filter in your camera has? Common wavelengths are ~590 nm, ~660 nm, ~715 nm, and ~850 nm. You can't get any false color with an 850 nm cutoff, and only a little bit with a 715 nm cutoff.

That said, with false color IR, it helps to have a properly set custom white balance and you need some significant post-processing work to get a 'pleasing' look with good color separation. And counter-intuitively, the mapping of wavelengths to colors at the sensor makes the sky red and the foliage cyan or bluish. One of the first steps when processing these images is to swap the red and blue channels, if you want your sky to appear blue.

I'm not much of a fan of the other two edits, they aren't bad but seem a bit too busy for my liking.

Yeah, I threw them together quickly for the sake of discussion and wasn't careful enough about contrast/levels, so a lot of the foliage ended up looking too similar to rock or snow, giving them a busy look. The first (color) image was what I worked on for a while, trying to make it match the color characteristics of Kodak EIR film. The color separation makes it seem less busy, because foliage, rock, sky, snow, and clouds are all readily distinguishable from each other.



Jun 17, 2020 at 09:22 AM
bellyface
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p.1 #5 · p.1 #5 · Yosemite - Washburn Point Infrared


I love this! Amazing!


Nov 02, 2022 at 05:00 PM
dakel
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p.1 #6 · p.1 #6 · Yosemite - Washburn Point Infrared


Well, when I opened up your post, the phrase, wtf, escaped from my lips. I certainly did not expect to see images looking like what you posted. Not my cup of tea personally, but absolutely striking!


Nov 02, 2022 at 05:15 PM
gdanmitchell
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p.1 #7 · p.1 #7 · Yosemite - Washburn Point Infrared


moondigger wrote:
Nobody has an opinion on this? Like it? Hate it? Indifferent? I am genuinely interested in feedback...


Since you asked... I'm not a fan of the red interpretation. Aside from the recognition that it used an unusual technical approach, the red trees just don't work for me. TBH, one of my first reactions was, "that looks like my screen when I have a masked selection in ACR."

And this isn't because I have an issue with abstracting natural scenes or with certain very unusual approaches to color. FWIW, it just doesn't speak to me.

I wonder if you could share a bit about your aesthetic thinking regarding this choice?

The first of the two BW interpretations has, to my thinking, a bit more potential. If it were mine, I'd consider selecting everything but the sky and generally knocking down the brightness of the landscape and trees a bit.

Dan



Nov 02, 2022 at 07:04 PM
SergeyT
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p.1 #8 · p.1 #8 · Yosemite - Washburn Point Infrared


As a showcase of approaches to visual presentations of images captured in IR light - a very good post!

The Reds in the first one look pure and beautiful.

Does one of the above variants make the image look "better" than another or use one of them over a "regular" color representation is justified - hard to say. In my opinion - not really.

The picture's content does not do much for me due to the following:
- the main part of the scene looks too distant from the viewer and therefore hard to "connect" with
- contains too many elements with many of them competing with each other for viewer's attention. At the end , none wins and my eyes tend to get stuck in the center, in between two bright spots (waterfalls)
- no main subject

In a summary, creative usage of IR light and IR-Chrome-like processing does not add to the image nor helps to break away from the above limitations

With that being said, I do like the look of IR-Chrome simulations and find their qualities beneficial for certain, less common and maybe even weird, subjects and scenes (ex: urban landscapes with either shaped by winds or tortured ("artistically" trimmed) by humans trees and bushes , cemeteries , etc).



Nov 03, 2022 at 07:47 PM





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