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Dan Wilson
{K:21104} 4/14/2008
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Thank you very much Anson for your help in this. Yes I have been investigating this for a while, and I am getting a Hoya R72, which is fine for my camera. I am going to buy a Canon G6 and convert it too a dedicated IR camera by replacing the camera's built in IR blocking filter with glass. The G6 has a built in ND filter which also helps reduce some of the IR glare.
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Anson Moye
{K:3480} 4/14/2008
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This particular one is a gel (plastic) Wratten 89b made by Kodak, although I have also used the Cokin 007 version, a hard plastic, and the Hoya R72. Your best bet is probably the Hoya R72, since I know of several Nikon owners who are using that filter. It is a little bit "darker" than the Kodak filter, in that it passes less visible red and therefore is easier to work with in PS. It is important to match the filter with the camera, Daniel, especially if you are want to get the sepia look that I shoot for on my old houses. Anson
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Dan Wilson
{K:21104} 4/14/2008
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Yes, I am buying an Infrared filter today, I have been wanting too for a long time but they have been hard to find here. Which is it that you use?
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Anson Moye
{K:3480} 4/14/2008
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These trees show up quite a bit more red on the UF site than they do on my screen directly off the hard drive, Daniel, but still, kind of interesting. A filter/camera combination I am experimenting with for the complete color reversal. Only a 6 Mp camera, the Digital Rebel. Thanks for stopping again. I really like your landscapes. Anson
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Dan Wilson
{K:21104} 4/14/2008
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Neat shot, I really like the colours you got here in infrared.
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Anson Moye
{K:3480} 4/14/2008
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This is a "false color" infrared shot, Michelle, taken through a Wratten 89b filter and then "color reversed" using the "channel mixer" feature of Photoshop. Thanks for stopping and commenting. Anson
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Michele Beccia
{K:16550} 4/14/2008
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Very strange capture!:)
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