Archived posting to the Leica Users Group, 2006/11/15

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Subject: [Leica] Some IR filtration experiments
From: len-1 at comcast.net (Leonard Taupier)
Date: Wed Nov 15 14:45:49 2006
References: <BAY116-F10A8B0DF2BB5E278847299FEA0@phx.gbl>

Mark,

You're right. I just tested the hot mirror with a gray card. There is  
no visible light loss with this filter. I was going by my experience  
shooting UV images with black light. I use a B+H 403 UV pass filter  
and a hot mirror. When I add the hot mirror I need to increase  
exposure. My light source must have a high IR component as well as UV.

Len


On Nov 15, 2006, at 4:57 PM, MARK DAVISON wrote:

> Leonard,
>
> I didn't notice any light loss with the IR cut filter (the Tiffen  
> hot-mirror filter).  These filters are listed in the manufacturers  
> catalogs as having a filter factor of 1.
>
> Mark
>
>
>
>> From: Leonard Taupier <len-1@comcast.net>
>> Reply-To: Leica Users Group <lug@leica-users.org>
>> To: Leica Users Group <lug@leica-users.org>
>> Subject: Re: [Leica] Some IR filtration experiments
>> Date: Wed, 15 Nov 2006 16:25:37 -0500
>>
>> Mark,
>>
>> Great work. Your results are especially interesting to me as I  
>> want  the kind of sensitivity to IR that the M8 has. I shoot a lot  
>> of IR  photos. That's just the opposite of everybody else. I'm  
>> very familiar  with the IR sensitivity of the D200 (none), the D2H  
>> (little more than  average), D2X (a little less than the D2H), and  
>> D1X ( more sensitive  than the D2H). The hot mirror IR filter  
>> approach may be fine in the  short term but that's slowing down  
>> all your lenses by 1 to 2 stops.  Since your experiment with the  
>> Phase One profile has only limited  success, you're right. Leica  
>> will have to fix it. That may not be too  easy as Leica has  
>> already suggested that adding an IR filter over the  sensor may  
>> (my interpretation) mess up their edge performance they  went so  
>> hard to develop). Your new Heliopan filter experiment will be   
>> interesting but I think the UV contribution to the problem is  
>> very  minor compared to IR. Most modern lenses roll off UV fairly  
>> well.  I  have to use enlarging lenses for UV images. And your  
>> D200 also has  absolutely no sensitivity to UV. It looks like a  
>> winner right now.  While I want the IR sensitivity of the M8, not  
>> at the expense of  color cast problems. For now I'll just wait and  
>> see how the M8  evolves and continue to buy more film for my M6  
>> and M7s.
>>
>> Thanks and keep us informed on your future experiments.
>> Len
>>
>>
>> On Nov 15, 2006, at 1:45 PM, MARK DAVISON wrote:
>>
>>> I have been conducting some experiments to understand the issue  
>>> of  IR contamination and filtration in digital cameras.  I have  
>>> posted  some results at
>>>
>>> http://gallery.leica-users.org/v/MarkEDavison/M8infrared/
>>>
>>> to show some comparative examples of IR filtration.  I have   
>>> included a Leica M8 shot where the filtration was done by  
>>> applying  a modified Phase One profile which is supposed to  
>>> correct blacks  under tungsten light. My conclusion is that the  
>>> software filtration  works surprising well on the blacks that are  
>>> IR contaminated, but  hardly affects the other contaminated  
>>> colors at all, but you should  look and come to your own conclusion.
>>>
>>> (Note: this is a cross post.  There is an on-going discussion of   
>>> software profile methods for IR filtration at
>>> http://www.leica-camera-user.com/digital-forum/9178-magenta-work-  
>>> around-capture-one-workflow.html
>>>
>>> or
>>>
>>> http://tinyurl.com/y6cjx2
>>>
>>> which gives more detail on the origins of the modified profile I   
>>> used on the Leica M8 image.)
>>>
>>> Here's a description of the shots:
>>>
>>> The scene was shot with incandescent illumination from ordinary   
>>> lightbulbs. The camera white balances were set to 2800 K  except   
>>> for the Epson R-D1, which was set to incandescent. (The Epson R- 
>>> D1  does not allow you to set white balance in Kelvin.)
>>>
>>> The first example is the D200, which is very insensitive to IR.  
>>> The  colors in the first D200 photograph are a very accurate  
>>> rendition  of the way the scene appears to my eye. Take special  
>>> note of the  maroon and green pile blankets, the black Leica M  
>>> lens, and the  black pile jacket at the bottom of the photograph.  
>>> The second  photograph shows the D200 with IR cut filtration (via  
>>> a Tiffen  standard hot mirror filter). There is hardly any  
>>> visible change in  the colors. The third photograph is with the  
>>> D200 and the IR pass  filter (a Hoya R72), taken at the same  
>>> exposure as the first two  photographs. There is no visble IR at  
>>> all at this exposure.
>>>
>>> The photographs continue in sequence for 3 more cameras: the  
>>> Leica  M8, the Epson R-D1 and the Nikon D2h. For each camera I  
>>> show an  image with no filtration, with IR cut, and IR pass, all  
>>> at the same  exposure. Note how much IR is recorded by the M8--it  
>>> is the most IR  sensitive of all the cameras. Note also how the  
>>> IR contamination  has completely bleached the green out of the  
>>> green pile blanket,  how the maroon blanket has shifted color,  
>>> how there is a purple  sheen on the barrel of the Leica lens, and  
>>> how the black pile  jacket has turned dark purple. The shot with  
>>> IR cut filtration  knocks down the purple sheen on the lens  
>>> barrel, improves color  saturation and contrast overall, but  
>>> doesn't quite return the green  pile blanket to the correct  
>>> color. Note also that there was a  glowing IR reflection from the  
>>> "black" pile jacket on the bottom of  the apple which is taken  
>>> out by the IR filtration.
>>>
>>> Similar comments apply to the Nikon D2h, but the infrared   
>>> sensitivity is weaker and the corrections with the IR cut filter   
>>> look better to my eye.
>>>
>>> The Leica M8 shot which has been filtered by application of the   
>>> profile Jamie Roberts supplied does have better blacks in the   
>>> anodized aluminum objects, but the green of the pile blanket at  
>>> the  top has not been restored, and in general the colors of the  
>>> pile  fabrics look faded.  More subtly, the IR reflection on the  
>>> bottom  of the apple has not been removed.
>>>
>>> My point is that IR contamination doesn't just affect synthetic   
>>> black objects and dark anodized aluminum--it contaminates   
>>> practially all synthetic pile fabrics that I can find in my  
>>> house.  So you can't just hunt down dark purple things and change  
>>> their  color. (By the way, if you shoot social events and  
>>> students in  classrooms in Seattle in the winter, you are going  
>>> to encounter a  lot of pile jackets and incandescent light, so  
>>> this is not some  obscure rare combination, at least for my use.)
>>>
>>> The Tiffen hot mirror filter which I used in these experiments  
>>> is  obviously too weak to restore all the colors (especially for  
>>> the  green pile fabric), so I have a better UV/IR cut filter on  
>>> order--a  Heliopan 8152.
>>>
>>> Some philosophical notes:
>>>
>>> I have been using these other cameras for some time now, and I   
>>> always had more trouble getting indoor shots from the R-D1 and  
>>> D2h  to look "right".  There was some indescernible purpleness  
>>> about  these photographs that reminded me of faded advertising  
>>> posters. In  comparison the D200 photographs looked rich and  
>>> vibrant.  Now I  understand the source of the problem. I'll be  
>>> using the IR cut  filters on the other cameras when the situation  
>>> warrants.  I have  also noticed that foliage never looks right in  
>>> the IR sensitive  cameras--it's always a funny spring green.  I  
>>> will wager anything  that this comes from high IR reflections in  
>>> plant leaves, even  under daylight.
>>>
>>> One huge difference between a film and digital camera is that  
>>> the  spectral sensitivity functions of the digital camera R, G,  
>>> and B  channels are fixed forever.  You can't change the  
>>> spectral  sensitivities by simply loading a different brand or  
>>> type of film.  Since this is the case, I think it would make life  
>>> easier for  serious photographers if digital camera manufacturers  
>>> would measure  the spectral sensitivity functions of their  
>>> cameras and publish  them, just as Kodak does with their films.   
>>> With such a graph you  can tell at a glance if the camera has  
>>> significant IR or UV  sensitivity, and you can pick your lens  
>>> filters accordingly.
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> Mark Davison
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> _______________________________________________
>>> Leica Users Group.
>>> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information
>>
>>
>> _______________________________________________
>> Leica Users Group.
>> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
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> See http://leica-users.org/mailman/listinfo/lug for more information


In reply to: Message from davison_m at msn.com (MARK DAVISON) ([Leica] Some IR filtration experiments)