Project 365 – Day 212: Experimenting with Infrared

July 30 2012

I decided the other day to purchase a Hoya R72 Infrared filter to try my hand at infrared photography.

I’ve seen many great IR images on the web over the years but never got round to trying it due to not having a filter. A fellow blogger called Steve pointed me in the direction of the Hoya R72 filter after I saw some of his great IR images over on his blog Ellis Pictures.

When my old D40X packed up on me a month or so back, I had considered getting it converted to take Infrared, but since the shutter mechanism was probably needing to be replaced, the cost would have worked out to be more than buying a used (and maybe already converted) replacement.

The filter route seemed like the affordable solution. One downside to doing infrared with a filter is that you need pretty long exposure times and the fact you need to remove the filter to focus each shot. Despite these drawbacks, I can think of quite a few subjects and locations I want to experiment with infrared, so hope to get quite a bit of use out of my new accessory.

For today’s initial trial, I headed up avenue du Parc to the George-Étienne Cartier monument and over to Parc Jeanne-Mance. I only took my 18-105mm lens and found that unfortunately this lens produces hot spots. I couldn’t find anyway to remove the patch of color that resulted and so decided to process all the images in monochrome where the hot spot was less obvious.

Another issue is that not having Photoshop, color channel switching is not straightforward. I have though found a plug-in by SimpelFilter for Elements which will hopefully do the job.

Anyway, here are some of my initial attempts at Infrared photography.

Infrared shot of Mount Royal from Parc Jeanne-Mance

Infrared shot of Mount Royal from Parc Jeanne-Mance
ISO 100 – 18mm – f14 – 25 sec

Infrared shot of the George-Étienne Cartier Monument

Infrared shot of the George-Étienne Cartier Monument
ISO 100 – 28mm – f14 – 20 sec

Infrared shot of the George-Étienne Cartier Monument

Infrared shot of the George-Étienne Cartier Monument
ISO 100 – 18mm – f16 – 25 sec

Infrared shot of the George-Étienne Cartier Monument

Infrared shot of the George-Étienne Cartier Monument
ISO 100 – 25mm – f11 – 25 sec

Infrared of Mount Royal

Infrared of Mount Royal
ISO 100 – 52mm – f11 – 25 sec

Montreal skyline in infrared

Montreal skyline in infrared
ISO 100 – 18mm – f14 – 25 sec

Parc Jeanne-Mance Infrared

Parc Jeanne-Mance Infrared
ISO 100 – 18mm – f11 – 25 sec

Infrared of parc Mount Royal

Infrared of parc Mount Royal
ISO 100 – 18mm – f16 – 25 sec

Infrared of parc Mount Royal

Infrared of parc Mount Royal
ISO 100 – 18mm – f16 – 30 sec

Infrared of parc Mount Royal

Infrared of parc Mount Royal
ISO 100 – 18mm – f14 – 30 sec

The only problem doing infrared is the fact it makes it look like it was taken on a snowy day – and I really don’t need to be looking at or thinking of snow just yet !!!

To view images in gallery format, simply click on one of the images below.

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Thanks for stopping by. Until next time.

– Martin

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2 Comments

  1. Ellis Pictures July 31, 2012 at 2:01 am #

    Hiya Martin, firstly thank you for the link back to my site ;-), and secondly what great pictures!!, what a coincidence that we both posted IR shots on the same day. Glad you are getting some good shots out of it, I do like the long exposure results with the R72 especially on the cloud movement. Have you tried the software program called ‘GIMP’ (weird name I know) http://www.gimp.org/features/ It allows you to swap the red and blue colour channels to get the more normal IR colours . Remember on the red channel turn red down to 0% and the blue to 100% and on the blue channel turn blue to 0% and the red up 100%. Photoextremist has done a good IR tutorial that well worth a watch http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=H8bpOc85Nw4&feature=results_video&playnext=1&list=PLFD77334C23786D5F

  2. Fallen Depths August 3, 2012 at 6:13 pm #

    Wow! I’m not a photographer but have really enjoyed your website. These pictures are particularly appealing. The last one is my favorite and pulls at my imagination. I can feel a story in there…like there is something to know about that world, perhaps a mystery.