hahaa!
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this is so cool!! Taking photos with atypical spectra is a lot of fun, even with the rather old and bulky camera. The imaging technique used here emulates old Kodak Aerochrome film stock. It’s not available anymore, but used to be a colour IR film, which mapped the IR on the blue channel, while remapping red and green to get this pink-foliage look. I do the same here! Blue is solely IR and swapped with the red channel in post. #photography
@janamarie makes for some beautiful and mezmerising shots

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I also retook a few recent photos in this lovely Aerochrome-style IR! They actually look fantastic, not even sure which versions I like more now..
#photographyThe camera also is already nutria approved!! Got sniffed and was found to be okay (I think..)
Also, man, water!! The turquoise is just fantastic! #photography
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hahaa! Successfully removed all IR and UV filters from my old Canon EOS 600D, I can do full spectrum, UV and IR photography now!
All of the following photos have been taken with a ~550nm+ lpf, meaning cutting everything under 550nm (blue, purple and uv) off. I love the vibrant pink foliage and dramatic turquoise skies #photography
@janamarie This is super cool!!
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hahaa! Successfully removed all IR and UV filters from my old Canon EOS 600D, I can do full spectrum, UV and IR photography now!
All of the following photos have been taken with a ~550nm+ lpf, meaning cutting everything under 550nm (blue, purple and uv) off. I love the vibrant pink foliage and dramatic turquoise skies #photography
I love these pictures. They really remind us that photography means "drawing with light"
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hahaa! Successfully removed all IR and UV filters from my old Canon EOS 600D, I can do full spectrum, UV and IR photography now!
All of the following photos have been taken with a ~550nm+ lpf, meaning cutting everything under 550nm (blue, purple and uv) off. I love the vibrant pink foliage and dramatic turquoise skies #photography
@janamarie The pink foliage is somehow more sharp than the original green. I wonder what’s that about
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hahaa! Successfully removed all IR and UV filters from my old Canon EOS 600D, I can do full spectrum, UV and IR photography now!
All of the following photos have been taken with a ~550nm+ lpf, meaning cutting everything under 550nm (blue, purple and uv) off. I love the vibrant pink foliage and dramatic turquoise skies #photography
@janamarie @woranhun check these awesome photos out!
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@janamarie IR gives some very weird false color options.
With this camera does the removal of the IR and UV filters still leave you with a Bayer or similar color filter over the sensor, or does that come out during the removal process?
@fuzzyfuzzyfungus yep! The Bayer filter remains and is crucial for this style of IR photography (blue becomes IR, red becomes blue, green… is green :D)
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@janamarie Transgender land
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@janamarie okay, now I know how they made the Barbie movie

@nachtet oh, that would be a great practical trick!!
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@janamarie That's crazy looking 🤯
@malcircuit right? And it’s not simply false coloured! (I mean yea, it’s false colour, it makes IR visible, but it’s an actual other set of wavelengths to what you would typically see!!)
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@janamarie Faaancy. I wonder how the night sky looks on this?
@manawyrm ooh!!! Can try to capture that!
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hahaa! Successfully removed all IR and UV filters from my old Canon EOS 600D, I can do full spectrum, UV and IR photography now!
All of the following photos have been taken with a ~550nm+ lpf, meaning cutting everything under 550nm (blue, purple and uv) off. I love the vibrant pink foliage and dramatic turquoise skies #photography
@janamarie wow! That looks stunning…
Reminds me that I wanted to look for different 3rd party camera modules for the #Pi0W and some 3rd party MIPI switch to build a Multi-Spectrum-Camera (Ideally with C(s), m4/3 or M42 mount!) to basically take IR, UV, Visible Light Images in one go.
But I guess that would necessitate some complex mirror, prism or like 3 lens mounts or of those cameras setup.
I'm shure dedicaded IR & UV cameras for the #RaspberryPi's #MIPI port do exist, they may just be expensive af like some high-framerate and/or global shutter sensors.
Only Thermal Imaging Systems are more expensive, and I am not talking about the high-framerate & high resolution ones, but the low res (128×128 if not lower), slow ( ≤9 fps) ones like FLIR Lepton…
But a Wide-Spectrum / Multi-Spectrum Camera would be kinda cool...
- But I guess the only way I could reasonably get that is with some MIPI Camera that doesn't have any filter on and a set of filters (potentially in like a "carousel selector" like many professional camcorders do for their internal ND filters)!Obviously I'm shure that camera's sensor you got "defiltered" is really tapering off oitside visible light in terms of sensitivity, so it's propably.necessary to do landscape.stills on a tripod to get any good shots oitside the visible spectrum.
- I'm not shure any UV/IR sensors that are available are cheap enough to allow someone to i.e. record a video with it, much less a handheld Vlog…
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Has that camera had the filter removed off the sensor? The pink and turquoise tones are gorgeous.
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this is so cool!! Taking photos with atypical spectra is a lot of fun, even with the rather old and bulky camera. The imaging technique used here emulates old Kodak Aerochrome film stock. It’s not available anymore, but used to be a colour IR film, which mapped the IR on the blue channel, while remapping red and green to get this pink-foliage look. I do the same here! Blue is solely IR and swapped with the red channel in post. #photography
@janamarie yeah, reminds me of the funky and weird analog film experiments @threetails has on her bucket list.
And given she's got a tripod and is used to really low ISO film, that would certainly be an entire bunny burrow to her…
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@janamarie The pink foliage is somehow more sharp than the original green. I wonder what’s that about
@farah I think that is because it actually does not only capture the green in the foliage, but IR as well!
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hahaa! Successfully removed all IR and UV filters from my old Canon EOS 600D, I can do full spectrum, UV and IR photography now!
All of the following photos have been taken with a ~550nm+ lpf, meaning cutting everything under 550nm (blue, purple and uv) off. I love the vibrant pink foliage and dramatic turquoise skies #photography
@janamarie ist das dritte bild der mount klotz?

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I also retook a few recent photos in this lovely Aerochrome-style IR! They actually look fantastic, not even sure which versions I like more now..
#photography@janamarie consider composing the B&W with colour images as #HDR so you get like a "luminance & chroma" composite for added details…
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@microblogc @janamarie wondering if there is a way to deactivate the built-in filter, and toggle that on/off, somehow.
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@janamarie wow! That looks stunning…
Reminds me that I wanted to look for different 3rd party camera modules for the #Pi0W and some 3rd party MIPI switch to build a Multi-Spectrum-Camera (Ideally with C(s), m4/3 or M42 mount!) to basically take IR, UV, Visible Light Images in one go.
But I guess that would necessitate some complex mirror, prism or like 3 lens mounts or of those cameras setup.
I'm shure dedicaded IR & UV cameras for the #RaspberryPi's #MIPI port do exist, they may just be expensive af like some high-framerate and/or global shutter sensors.
Only Thermal Imaging Systems are more expensive, and I am not talking about the high-framerate & high resolution ones, but the low res (128×128 if not lower), slow ( ≤9 fps) ones like FLIR Lepton…
But a Wide-Spectrum / Multi-Spectrum Camera would be kinda cool...
- But I guess the only way I could reasonably get that is with some MIPI Camera that doesn't have any filter on and a set of filters (potentially in like a "carousel selector" like many professional camcorders do for their internal ND filters)!Obviously I'm shure that camera's sensor you got "defiltered" is really tapering off oitside visible light in terms of sensitivity, so it's propably.necessary to do landscape.stills on a tripod to get any good shots oitside the visible spectrum.
- I'm not shure any UV/IR sensors that are available are cheap enough to allow someone to i.e. record a video with it, much less a handheld Vlog…
@kkarhan ooh, that sounds fun (and complicated to build)! I think the Omnivision OS05A20 sensor is great with IR
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