Showing posts with label Infrared Filters. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Infrared Filters. Show all posts

Thursday, August 28, 2025

Fishing and a bit of IR fun.


Objects in the mirror....
one of my favorite Meatloaf songs was titled this...




When I go tripping by car either as a passenger or doing errands, I take my Infrared camera along.
Sure I might miss some cool stuff that could be taken in regular light. But I prefer a world that is wildly different.

AND..
yes, I pull over to take shots. 


Same road, different day, different view with a different light spectrum filter.
 

The neighbor's shed that live 1 mile away.


Finally, looking across the ridge to a beef farm.



The best days for infrared are those days with bright sunshine and clouds in the sky. A bonus are those days when I can find water included.

So fishing days are the best days for Infrared.
However....
During my rush to fix up a take a long bag, I accidently swiped my old IR camera off the bed and it crashed to the floor.
The camera survived. The little lens I'd purchased years ago, sadly, did not.

My IR filters are all for that lens which have 37mm threads. It is a general walk about lens that is not pricey and is super light. It shoots from 14mm-45mm. Perfect for most of my IR photography. 

I swapped out a 14-100mm lens with a 58mm threads and found some old colored filters and made the best of it.
Actually it was sort of fun.

Charlie went along and provided us with quite a bit of entertainment. He got to see his first fish and was super curious.



Steve and Charlie are infatuated with each other. Here Steve explains to Charlie all about worms.


Worms don't taste good.

But wiggly fish is another story!


Charlie had to inspect each fish caught thereafter. 

It was a great fishing day and we cleaned 8 nice little fish for our supper on Thursday night!

Thankfully, I looked on line and found a used replacement lens at a good price.

Thursday, August 07, 2025

Fishing and photos....

 We had a perfect day ... to go fishing. 

With Steve's help, we made it to Lee Lake in Cazenovia once more. And...the fish actually were biting. It was only the little fish, but at least the guys had fun deciding which one was going to be the BIG one.


It was a great day to take my Infrared Camera and more than one light spectrum filter. Below are the two guys deep in conversation...or they are just sitting quietly enjoying each others company. These two do chat but have long silences in between.

Some conversations start with ... Do you remember when....???  I listen intently to those stories because it is a history of things that occurred before I met Rich.
To think these guys are in their late 70's ... and have known each other since they were in their late 20's. 

Their friendship never ended but their lives took different directions with the two of them connecting up every once in a while.

Below...Steve tied a table umbrella to the dock so Rich can stay cooler in the shade. He thinks of everything!
Infrared Photo...


Bassy the stuffy fish did come along! Rich said she couldn't stay on the dock with them. He was afraid that she'd blow off as we actually had a breeze.

Cell shot....


The cool thing about Infrared is that you can get so 
many different looks with one filter. This
bench was filmed in the spectrum of
550nm.
This first shot is what it looks like
in camera. Startling blue foliage
and an orange hued sky.
Red becomes pink.


This is the black and white version. Basically I just desaturated the shot
and upped the contrast a bit.


The shot below is achieved by
what is called Channel swapping.
IR only picks up a few colors.
This is very hard to explain and it
is pretty technical.
I know that I enjoy the results.

The world looks foreign.


Here are a couple more views of the man made lake in Infrared using different light spectrums.






I really had fun with the Infrared camera. Hot sunny days are the best for using this camera.


Below are shots I did with my upgraded but not very fancy Google Pixel 9a. My 6a was on its last legs. What did surprise me [aside from the price] was the new ability of the camera to take 'long' exposures. So I went and tried it out by the Caz Dam.


I've been fighting off using my cell phone as a camera for a long time. But I can see its uses while hiking a long distance and not lugging along heavy camera equipment.

I did some other experimenting with a clearfield center diopter filter I found at a second hand store for $1. It was the filter I used in the very first shot which allowed the center to be in focus and the edges become blurred.
I can see where it will be very very handy in some toy photography.

This is the Lady of Pain from the Dungeons and Dragons collection. I thought she'd go perfect with a poison dart frog.


We had more adventures after leaving the lake. 

Eventually we did make it home safe and sound and tired out. But Rich and I are looking forward to our adventure next week.










Friday, December 09, 2022

Taking a Breath

 After a really really Grumpy Week [I was the Grump], I decided to take off and go hiking at my favorite place. The Kickapoo Valley Reserve.

I looked at the weather and decided to get a hike in at the Reserve because today [Friday] would not be a good day. We are having a snow and ice storm -- the roads are ice under the snow so it looks like a good day to cancel my eye doc appointment and reschedule.

I wanted to find the little ice cave again. I knew other ice flows would be more impressive, but I wanted to explore the bluff bottoms next to the river. The river is down and the ground below the bluffs are frozen so it seemed like a perfect opportunity.

I took my Infrared Camera. For those who don't understand what infrared does, it sees the light in different wavelengths depending on the filter used on the camera. It's complicated but the results are pretty fascinating.

Chlorophyll reflects light and so things that still are green and living show up in different colors. The light spectrum may be how other creatures can see the world.

Little iced pond not in IR.


Same pond with IRChrome filter which produces reddish foliage.



The bluffs, seen in IRChrome:



The red shows mosses and grasses against the rocks and dead plant matter.

This filter does show a red tint for foliage and blue for water and sky. The sun was shining brightly on the left of the shot below and so it basically blew out the whites.


In an odd shot I risked shooting towards the light and got another different look. Before special processing some of these photos look absolutely abysmal.


I swapped over to the 665nm filter and found one decent shot I could live with.


An 'unprocessed' shot using the 665nm filter:


Processed:


The trees above, straight out of camera 

and processed


And at last, after two hours of wandering and looking at rocks, moss, skies, and the river, I ended up at the little ice cave. It isn't the best or biggest one, just a personal favorite of mine.

A 'selfie' with my tiny pocket camera on a wrap around tripod.


By the time I got back to where I'd parked, I felt refreshed and calm. I was back in my happy place and it seems that I got rid of Ms. Grumpy.


Tuesday, May 31, 2022

Infrared Day

The Meadow - not in infrared. 

This is the area I'd like to be able to clip in some fashion. 
I just don't see that happening for me. At one time hubby would clip it with his tractor and brush hog.
In other places where I'd knocked down the burdock and sourdock, the motherwort is flourishing. 
I just can't win!

This scene is peaceful and calming.


It was too hot to do a lot of things outside. I usually clip the herds' manes by this time of the year, but I'm going to wait for my 'farm' help to do that this coming week. Charlie was nagging me for a walk so I headed up the driveway with just the Infrared camera.

Driveway: 665nm Filter


While hot days with a midday sun are horrible for most photography, those are the prime conditions for Infrared. Different filters with different wavelengths of light give different looks. 





Charlie was very unimpressed with the heat and hot sun. I thought I'd cool him off by heading into the forest...

Charlie in Infrared. Zombie Dog!


Infrared does some weird stuff to the eyes of people and dogs! They look really odd.

I gave Charlie a ride back to the ridge and started home.

This was neat in IR but I sure liked it in Sepia black and white better.

Neighobor's Vintage Tractor. 
He has put it up for sale.


I dropped the Hot Dog off at the house with hubby. They proceeded to watch really old strange Westerns on TV. I am not into blurry crappy movies at all. 

I grabbed a 720nm filter from my pile of ancient filters I had. I wanted to experiment and enjoy the summer day some more.

The herd under one of the boxelders they love to use for shade. I took this shot in Infrared with a 720nm filter which turns anything with chlorophyll in it basically white. 

Infrared is fun to experiment with. Thank goodnes
the mules didn't appear to be Zombies!




The 720nm filter will produce white leaves and blue sky
if you have a converted camera and use the green grass to set
your white balance.

Weird, right?


I got mesmerized by the backwards light of things. The dark greens I saw with my normal vision were bright white while the trunks and branches of the trees were dark and moody.


I got caught up in gazing up at the branches into the light. I shot a lot of photos more for the dark patterns of the branches than for anything else. 

Most of them didn't turn out as I 'saw' them in my mind, but it was fun to see the intricate patterns of the leaves and the branches.



Infrared offers so many possibilities in a creative way.

Locust tree budding out next
to our house. Those are leaves
not flowers.
The flowers will come in a few
days.


Yes, I do experiment a lot. It is the one thing I am passionate about. Monday was just a great day for it.



Saturday, September 04, 2021

The Hay Valley Adventure

Charlie and I took off to a trail I hadn't been on since 1996. Hay Valley Trail. It can be a very long trail, but if one watches for another trail called the Washout Trail and takes that, a loop can be made back to the parking area.

I also knew that skeeters were going to be an issue. 



Here we are at the trail head with a little pep talk from me to my Trail Leader. I've been wearing this net and have gotten so used to it that I forgot I had it on. I tried drinking from my water bottle with it on! That was hilarious. It may look stupid, but it is a life saver when the bugs are out!

I took my pocket camera and brought my Infrared camera with with 2 funky colored and cheap filters along. I chose the bright yellow and the blue.

I've seen others experiment with filters like these and yes, they are cheap and generally not very useful.

But, I really enjoyed experimenting.
This was the start of the trail with the Yellow filter on.
I took this same shot with my little pocket camera and it really did not pick up the nuances of the sunlight and path. It was green with dark areas and overly bright areas. This is one of the places that Infrared does shine through.


Off the trail I was able to spot a lot of small orange mushrooms. In fact if the bugs were NOT so bad I would have really had a lot of fun searching. But I didn't know how long the trail would take us to do, so I grabbed some shots with the little pocket camera and kept moving.




We found the foundation that was on the side of the trail. I do know the history behind the foundation. An old gent told me that this was part of the farm his parents had been removed from.
He'd buried his toys in a box not far from there and had always hoped to go back and retrieve them. This had been part of their Ice house where they kept things cold before electricity and refrigeration.


Foundation shots with Charlie - inspecting photographed in Infrared with the Yellow Filter on. 




Just when I thought Charlie and I had missed Trail marker 10, we found it.



IF you are on foot, YOU do not want to take the wrong trail in this section, well, not if you are planning a loop. The Hay Valley Trail or Bailout Trail will take a hiker far from the trail head at Camp U. 
Bringing a physical paper map IS recommended, do not depend on your cell phone for directions. Many areas have no coverage. 

I thought of someone who sees faces in trees when I saw this old oak. He looks confused about the trail signs too.


The tree on the left is dead, however if one looks down the valley past this tree, one can see the Kickapoo River. 
At this point the trail has made so many switchbacks and turns, a person can be completely disoriented. One needs to keep in mind that the trail stays on the west side of the river and in its twisted up and down way, it runs basically north and south.



This is on the Washout Trail where Charlie and I had a small break for eats and water. I also put the blue filter on for the rest of the hike. 


The Washout Trail is a hiker only trail. Aptly named as there are places that do wash out and water runs off down the middle of the trail. It is scenic and enters a majestic maple forest which stopped me in my tracks. 
There was no way that I could even attempt to catch the incredible greens and dappled sunlight.

I tried and failed with the pocket camera. However. I can really see hiking to here when the maples turn and bath myself in the golden Autumn light and leaves!


I knew from the map that the trail would connect back up to the Hay Valley Trail in the valley and I'd cross the new bridge back to campsite U.
When I approached the valley floor there was a trail split.
One went left and uphill, the other went down and around a huge open field and into the woods.

I swatted skeeters and opened the map. No such split was noted on the map. There was no markers and both trails looked used. I walked around the field trail for a few minutes and decided this one probably could be it, but it felt wrong. I could hear vehicles on Hay Valley road where I had parked.

I took a reading with the map and the compass and decided to take the other trail. Halfway through that trail I came across trees that had blown down and had not been cut up. At that point I realized I was not on the proper path but probably on a trail used by the reserve workers when they did work on other areas of the ridge above me. 
I muttered a word or two to Charlie who was now dragging his butt. I picked him up and went on. 
I ended up on the edge of a marsh that connected to the Washout Trial. My choice of going up and then down to the marsh worked out better. Less water to walk through and it was shadier.



We made it back to the car and then walked to bridge 6 and admired the quiet Kickapoo River. Just last week it had been raging over the road where I stood.
One last shot with the blue filter and the IR camera and we headed back for snacks in the back of the 'Ru.


We came, we adventured, we survived. And the skeeters never carried us off.
I will do this one again in the fall and in the winter. 
I doubt this trail is often used by hikers. Not because it is really difficult, but that it is a bit off the beaten track.

That makes it a Great Trail in my book.