Thanks Moose, and Wayne and Nathan. It's funny, Moose, I've never been
interested in doing IR photography before. But what with The Plague and
all, I've got some time on my hands. I saw an IR photo online that I
liked the other day. And I thought, "Hmm, I wonder what things around
here would look like if I tried IR." My old M8 was sitting in a drawer.
I'd recently pulled it out to test my TV remote. And it said, "Look at
me, I can do IR! Handheld, even!" I thought, why not give it a whirl?
So I crossed Jeff Bezos' palm with a few coins, and here we are.
I really like the result. There's something pleasing about the fact
that leaves glow in IR, and blue skies with clouds are
Wagnerian-dramatic. It can certainly be a cliché. But sometimes it can
make a purty pitcher, so why not? It's part of what I call my Mudpie
Theory of Art. Sometimes we just play in the mud and see what kind of
mudpie we can make. Garry Winogrand said, "I photograph to see what
things look like photographed."
OTOH, my non-photographer wife said, "But it doesn't look like that."
After some discussion, she understood why I like it, but she still
prefers the "natural" look of regular B&W. Even though regular B&W is
itself an abstraction.
--Peter
> Mission nicely accomplished!
>
> OTOH, I don't "get" it. I don't see what it adds to the subject.
>
> Then again, I don't "get" most IR photos, and couldn't understand Gee
Bee's love of sometimes mucking up his
> lovely landscapes with strong filters that messed about with the
greens, either.
>
>
> Not a complete IR grump, I do have a 17x22 print of this Ctein IR
photos that I love. <http://ctein.com/Peggy.htm> > The print is
significantly more engaging than the web JPEG. Can't say just why I like
it, as most of his IR work
> doesn't do much for me.
>
>
> I. R. Challenged Moose
> On 8/20/2020 5:25 PM, Peter Klein wrote:
>
> This is my front yard:
>
<https://www.flickr.com/photos/24844563@N04/50249862157/in/dateposted-public/>
> This is my front yard in infrared:
>
<https://www.flickr.com/photos/24844563@N04/50249664291/in/dateposted-public/>
> Any questions? :-)
>
> Leica M8, 35/2 Summicron IV at f/5.6. Hoya R72* filter for the IR
shot. Best IR obtained using the right-hand > f/2 DOF mark, based on a
very quick hand-held test. The M8 TTL metering is close enough to be
useful. The M8's IR > shutter speeds in sunlight are about 1/60 second
plus or minus one stop at mid-apertures and ISO 160. I boosted > the red
channel and general contrast in the B&W conversion. The idea was to get
the leaves almost white but still > maintain some detail.
--
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