Sure. First of all you need to convert a camera to be able to capture infrared. That is usually done by removing a filter installed right next to the sensor. Then you can use different filters on your lens to get different effects. The most common one is the '“Wood effect”: basically all plants reflect a lot of infrared from the sun and get a kind of glow. In this picture I used a red filter to capture visible light on the red channel and infrared light on the blue and green channels. Then I swapped the blue and red chamnel to get the “aerochrome look”. It can be overwhelming at first, but once you get going on this topic it’s quite simple.
Holy shit that’s beautiful. It’s like some sort of cotton candy world
Infrared glow combined with the inability to focus on infinity and pink :D
Can you elaborate on that?
I saw those photographs often and I don’t quite get what is happening but I would love to do it myself.
Always reminds me of no mans sky planets.
Sure. First of all you need to convert a camera to be able to capture infrared. That is usually done by removing a filter installed right next to the sensor. Then you can use different filters on your lens to get different effects. The most common one is the '“Wood effect”: basically all plants reflect a lot of infrared from the sun and get a kind of glow. In this picture I used a red filter to capture visible light on the red channel and infrared light on the blue and green channels. Then I swapped the blue and red chamnel to get the “aerochrome look”. It can be overwhelming at first, but once you get going on this topic it’s quite simple.