Early morning light rakes across the deck of Boca Raton's Townsend Place pool area. As I work with infrared I have been shooting mostly natural scenes; trees, gardens and the like for my faux color photographs so, having spent several years shooting architecture, thought I would try it on a structure. The faux color effect is on the trees and the pool tiles, everything else is pretty much the way it looks to the eye.
IR is shot on different nm wavelengths, this particular filter is the IR Chrome which emulates the Kodak Aerochrome film and affects foliage, which is why the green palm trees render orange and the other colors "normal." Other filters may limit some color, and in varying degrees, all color - which typically results in white foliage and clouds against a very dark sky.
You are not ticking clockwise. This was not shot with my tilt-shift lens, I don't have IR filters for it, this was shot with the Fuji 20-35 on a GFX.
That's one of the beauties of the world, Aboud, that everyone can see it through their own imagination.
Reminds me of a song by Harry Chapin, "Flowers are Red".
Douglas