Modifying a camera to full spectrum can be expensive ($200-500), So If you don't have a camera you want to modify or just don't have the budget for it, I created the Infrared Lut, that can recreate the look of the IR chrome filter on any video footage and even on photos. Get it Here : www.mathieustern.com/luts/infrared
I made an app that makes me see your mostly red-orange infrared in so many more colors. Like blue-red (not magenta) and green-red (not yellow). And that way your infrared pictures are one of the most colorful pictures I've seen in a long while. Very nice pictures and filter!
I just realized how much potential this filter has for B/W photography with bodies of water, like…imagine the level of contrast in the water you would get with infrared. This ought to be done.
Gorgeous results! I definitely need to experiment more with IR Chrome, the green-teal look of the water is incredible. What's interesting to note about Aerochrome and its IRG (infrared-red-green) color model is that if you look at aerial photos shot with it, clear bodies of water appear totally black, because the infrared light doesn't penetrate and there's no visible blue light recorded. So, a more extreme version of this effect. I've used this color model and shot pictures of swimming pools, and they turn from cyan to deep dark ultramarine.
Ahahah I was waiting for the “before and after” but then remembered I’m color blind and realized it was actually just “after”… Impressive shots and beautiful scenery anyways!
@Mathieu, very nice again, another try-out tip. Use a dark green filter from X0 Hoya like, or Cokin. (so not a yellowish green filter) . You can obtain blue air combined with purple-red vegetation. Water can be coloured like blue to green with more neutral blue-gray colors. With my old D200, a ccd sensor with no micro lenses at the sensor pushed out even a more spectacular spectrum with that filter than the Nikon Z6. This due to the micro lenses on the sensor of modern camera's. You can even experiment with the combo green filter and a redhancer/lightpollution filter.
1:30 Viefinder or what were you seeing, both are reality! The only diference is that one you seen, and the other dont! hehehe Great video nonetheless, i have a old Canon XSi camera that i think would be great to experiment IR photos. This videos help me a lot to decide if i sell it cheap or convert it and have fun. Would love to know were each place on this video is, beautiful!!!
Lovely work Mathieu! Personally I find too much red in an image 'too loud'. Could you create a lut to spread out the reds, so foliage becomes a bit more interesting?
I modified my "HP Photosmart M527" camera myself ‒ carefully removed the infra filter from the sensor. 🙂 Because it is a compact camera, filters cannot be attached directly to it, the only option is to hold filters in front of the lens manually. For unknown reasons it can only apply effects to already taken (saved) images, for example, cannot shoot directly in grayscale mode. 😑
It would be interesting to see you try doing an IR trichrome with ir sensitive b&w film and an IR exposure instead of the red one. I believe attic darkroom has alredy done this and even semi-successfuly copied those black and white images to b&w film to get a positive image. Then tripple exposed those frames with filters onto slide film to get a kind of diy aerochrome.
The magnetic filter is a chrome lite. Are these results using the lite or the screw on chrome filter? If it was the light magnetic filter did you enhance reds in post?
You need to see the combined works of Richard Mosse and their venture into near infrared as well as mid infrared. Water doesn't look any great in longwave infrared. The resolution and integration times aren't there to capture any detail. I have seen some interesting results to combine vis(luma) and LWIR(hue) for thermal vents.
@@MathieuStern Et la vidéo est tellement d'actualité avec Le james webb telescope qui capte en IR. Il parait que les infrarouges des étoiles ont du mal à traverser l'atmosphère (d'où le besoin de passer par des satellites). Ceci dit, des photos des étoiles ça peut être à essayer aussi. Merci encore pour la chaine
oh right, yeah the 2nd one was more pastel pink (and then a few varistions), I got them mixed up. Are you planning to make videos for the other filters as well?
The sensor of the camera detect only the near infrared, the neighbourhood of visible light. By the way, the spectral sensitivity is limited by itself. It is emitted by hot objects like the sun, fire or light bulbs. Your body is around 37°C warm. To detect the wavelength of this temperature is much higher, the sensor has to be cooled. Otherwise, it only sees noise of its environment and itself.
I‘m so glad I sold my IR / full spectrum camera while I could still get a good price for it; although I admit it was great fun to play around with it for a while, but seriously: The look of the photos is just too unnatural to be appealing in the long term. I only kept a few shots.
ehi Mathieu great video as always! I love infrared and IR Chrome filters, but is there anything you can find similar in Europe? Kolari is in the US so everything gets so expensive! Thank you!
Scam alert! I am sure you are are alredy aware but there is a bot in these comments pretending to be you and saying to message you on telegram for a giveaway. You might want to alert everybody in a community post before someone falls for it.
Modifying a camera to full spectrum can be expensive ($200-500), So If you don't have a camera you want to modify or just don't have the budget for it, I created the Infrared Lut, that can recreate the look of the IR chrome filter on any video footage and even on photos.
Get it Here : www.mathieustern.com/luts/infrared
I'm afraid not. But, could it be used as a Canon Picture Style with the official Canon editing programs? (i.e. Digital Photo Proffesional)
U r the best!
Thanks a lot Mathieu.
Salut Mathieu, je viens d'acheter votre LUT Infra Red.
@@3h57film8 Merci !
Can't wait for the rest of the filters
Yeeeeah
I made an app that makes me see your mostly red-orange infrared in so many more colors. Like blue-red (not magenta) and green-red (not yellow). And that way your infrared pictures are one of the most colorful pictures I've seen in a long while. Very nice pictures and filter!
The composition is the cherry on top, marvellous.
I just realized how much potential this filter has for B/W photography with bodies of water, like…imagine the level of contrast in the water you would get with infrared. This ought to be done.
Gorgeous results! I definitely need to experiment more with IR Chrome, the green-teal look of the water is incredible.
What's interesting to note about Aerochrome and its IRG (infrared-red-green) color model is that if you look at aerial photos shot with it, clear bodies of water appear totally black, because the infrared light doesn't penetrate and there's no visible blue light recorded. So, a more extreme version of this effect. I've used this color model and shot pictures of swimming pools, and they turn from cyan to deep dark ultramarine.
Please, please make more videos on Infrared photography!
These photos look absolutely amazing! It was so much fun to watch the video, thank you!
The photos are stunning!!
This looks incredible
these photos are beautiful!
u are awesome ur photos and ur vision magnificient
I love this series
Beautiful
Love this!
Ahahah I was waiting for the “before and after” but then remembered I’m color blind and realized it was actually just “after”… Impressive shots and beautiful scenery anyways!
Another great video! I'd be interested to see real infrared images vs. images with your LUT!
Красиво получилось👍
incredible
@Mathieu, very nice again, another try-out tip. Use a dark green filter from X0 Hoya like, or Cokin. (so not a yellowish green filter) . You can obtain blue air combined with purple-red vegetation. Water can be coloured like blue to green with more neutral blue-gray colors. With my old D200, a ccd sensor with no micro lenses at the sensor pushed out even a more spectacular spectrum with that filter than the Nikon Z6. This due to the micro lenses on the sensor of modern camera's. You can even experiment with the combo green filter and a redhancer/lightpollution filter.
1:30
Viefinder or what were you seeing, both are reality!
The only diference is that one you seen, and the other dont! hehehe
Great video nonetheless, i have a old Canon XSi camera that i think would be great to experiment IR photos.
This videos help me a lot to decide if i sell it cheap or convert it and have fun.
Would love to know were each place on this video is, beautiful!!!
Cool! :)
Keep up the good work!
This is amazing !! bravo
Try a night sky infrared photografy
Pocket James Webb
Lovely work Mathieu!
Personally I find too much red in an image 'too loud'. Could you create a lut to spread out the reds, so foliage becomes a bit more interesting?
screenshot and edit away
Cool
Cool like water ?
@@MathieuStern thats really cool. Always been fascinaited about particels affecting pictures and what caneras pick up and so fourth.
I modified my "HP Photosmart M527" camera myself ‒ carefully removed the infra filter from the sensor. 🙂
Because it is a compact camera, filters cannot be attached directly to it, the only option is to hold filters in front of the lens manually. For unknown reasons it can only apply effects to already taken (saved) images, for example, cannot shoot directly in grayscale mode. 😑
Can you shoot video in infrared?
It would be interesting to see you try doing an IR trichrome with ir sensitive b&w film and an IR exposure instead of the red one.
I believe attic darkroom has alredy done this and even semi-successfuly copied those black and white images to b&w film to get a positive image. Then tripple exposed those frames with filters onto slide film to get a kind of diy aerochrome.
ayyyyyy a wild attic darkroom mention, love the guy
The magnetic filter is a chrome lite. Are these results using the lite or the screw on chrome filter? If it was the light magnetic filter did you enhance reds in post?
1:40 literally reminds me of “Meddle”’s album cover by Pink Floyd.
You need to see the combined works of Richard Mosse and their venture into near infrared as well as mid infrared.
Water doesn't look any great in longwave infrared. The resolution and integration times aren't there to capture any detail.
I have seen some interesting results to combine vis(luma) and LWIR(hue) for thermal vents.
Very nice ! Ça aurait été sympas de voir des portraits en infrarouge ! Notamment les yeux
faudrais que je test en effet, pour un autre episode :)
@@MathieuStern Et la vidéo est tellement d'actualité avec Le james webb telescope qui capte en IR. Il parait que les infrarouges des étoiles ont du mal à traverser l'atmosphère (d'où le besoin de passer par des satellites). Ceci dit, des photos des étoiles ça peut être à essayer aussi. Merci encore pour la chaine
Yes
These photos are so beautiful yet I find them somewhat anxiety inducing.
It might be some uncanny valley type of thing.
TFW buying and modifying a digital camera still works out cheaper than shooting aerochrome
was this the same filter as in the 2nd video about this full spectrum camera?
Its the same IRChrome filter than in the first video.
oh right, yeah the 2nd one was more pastel pink (and then a few varistions), I got them mixed up.
Are you planning to make videos for the other filters as well?
Can a film camera produce this infrared effect?
Hi Mathieu, congratulations for the video once again. What are the pros and cons for the Lut version vs the IR filter mounted on a camera ? Thanks JM
What does infrared photography look like at night?
The sensor of the camera detect only the near infrared, the neighbourhood of visible light. By the way, the spectral sensitivity is limited by itself. It is emitted by hot objects like the sun, fire or light bulbs. Your body is around 37°C warm. To detect the wavelength of this temperature is much higher, the sensor has to be cooled. Otherwise, it only sees noise of its environment and itself.
fun fact: i have once edited some photos to like this without knowing about infrared photography
where can we see them ?
@@MathieuStern i didn't post them anywhere
whats the location/area? :) its beautiful!
Switzerland and Portugal
I‘m so glad I sold my IR / full spectrum camera while I could still
get a good price for it; although I admit it was great fun to play around with it for a while, but seriously: The look of the photos is just too unnatural to be appealing in the long term. I only kept a few shots.
ehi Mathieu great video as always! I love infrared and IR Chrome filters, but is there anything you can find similar in Europe?
Kolari is in the US so everything gets so expensive! Thank you!
Not sure, their filters are pretty new, the Irchrome is not easy to find outside of the us
Which wavelength filter are you using for the images in the video?
The IR chrome filter, I did a first video about it if you want to check it
@@MathieuSternI've received a scam message to join you ok Telegram for a giveaway: I signaled it as spam: you should probably signal it to You Tube.
Wet !
Kinda like colour kodak aerochrome film back in the day🤔🤔
have you ever tried to shot some potraits?
in the first episode, but i should try with a full face portrait
👍
It's like orange & teal on steroids.
Looks like i'm playing no mans sky
From boring to magical images
Scam alert! I am sure you are are alredy aware but there is a bot in these comments pretending to be you and saying to message you on telegram for a giveaway.
You might want to alert everybody in a community post before someone falls for it.
thanks, I removed all the comments and reported the account, you can too if you see them again