Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/10/20
[Author Prev] [Author Next] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Author Index] [Topic Index] [Home] [Search]Nice photos, Jim. Brings back memories when my parents would bring us to Maine every year as kids in Massachusetts. I shoot a lot of IR these days but have converted to digital in B&W mode. I find the end result has less grain then film and has the same ghostly look as film. You have to be careful what digital camera you use though, as IR sensitivity will vary a lot with different models and camera brands. I find the Nikon D1 series to be just fine. D2X and D200 are poor for IR. For film IR I find my M6 is perfect. You can keep the filter on for framing and focusing. Makes shooting very easy. It'll be interesting to see how the M8 handles IR. That would be the best of both worlds. For false color IR I also use my digital SLR. For a filter use 2 linear polarizers and adjust them both until the viewfinder goes to its darkest point. Since you can view results right away you can experiment with exposure until it's just right. Foliage goes magenta, sky is deep blue and clouds are puffy white. Very striking. Len On Oct 20, 2006, at 9:10 AM, Jim Hemenway wrote: > Hi Folks: > > At the end of September I loaded up my newly acquired "vintage" > Pentax MX with some Konica Infrared film to see what kind of > results would come out of shooting autumn foliage in infrared. > > For my tastes, infrared film does best when used in the spring/ > summer on green foliage, which it renders as a ghostly white or > light gray, at the same time it usually renders those dark blue > afternoon skies as black or dark gray. > > I attended a wedding on Mount Desert Island in Maine on September > 30th, > about 260 miles from where I live, and the next morning I took some > photos at Acadia National Park on the island and later one of what's > left of Sherman Lake in Newcastle Maine, about halfway home. > > There was an actual lake there for most of the last century but > when we > had all that rain a year ago, the dam which formed the lake was washed > away. > > Groton, where I took the barn photo is about 25 miles west of where > I live. > > Here's the photos: > http://www.half-fast.com/AcadiaInfrared-Oct2006/ > > As you can see from this batch, the autumn foliage doesn't present as > "ghostly" as does the earlier leaves. > > Jim > > _______________________________________________ > Leica Users Group. > See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information