Infrared S2000
Originally Posted by Ro_Ja Boy,Jul 28 2005, 10:16 PM
The sides are GP Sports without the door inserts. I am unsure if they are GP Sports or GP Sports style, but either way his car looks
ing hot!!! 
Ryan
Ryan
Thanks everyone 
That is an IR filter with ND + Polarizer on my Sony DSC-F717. I used photoshop to crop them a little because IR photography gets messy on the edges. Someone was asking about heat detection in the photo - that is Thermal photography - stupid expensive stuff
- IR blocks out part of the light spectrum (or pulls from only certain parts of the light spectrum depending how you define it). This may help:
Sides are GP Sports clones, bought when GP Sports was rumored to be out of business. One day the whole kit is coming off as the car goes into a full Mugenization

That is an IR filter with ND + Polarizer on my Sony DSC-F717. I used photoshop to crop them a little because IR photography gets messy on the edges. Someone was asking about heat detection in the photo - that is Thermal photography - stupid expensive stuff
- IR blocks out part of the light spectrum (or pulls from only certain parts of the light spectrum depending how you define it). This may help:
Originally Posted by CoCam: IR Photography FAQ
Infrared photography uses films that are sensitive to both the light we can see and some of the longer length (above 700 nm) infra-red radiation. The film is also sensitive in the UV region (below 400 nm). In the case of the Kodak HIE film it is sensitive to near-infrared radiation out to approximately 1000 nm wavelength (1 micron). There are scientific uses for such films which include forensic applications and aerial crop and forest surveys. The film is also used in the restoration and investigation of paintings, but here the focus is on expanding our range of picture making media.
Some people just try infrared once as a novelty, others get hooked on the effects and exploit it as their main film, especially Kodak's High Speed Infrared black and white film.
Some people just try infrared once as a novelty, others get hooked on the effects and exploit it as their main film, especially Kodak's High Speed Infrared black and white film.
Originally Posted by arrrmand,Jul 29 2005, 01:10 AM
honestly, i've never been a fan of infrared pics......if possible, i would love to see those pics in full color. i bet they're gorgeous
I'll take some color photos later - the plants are actually a bit wiltered from the heat right now, so the color shots don't really speak to the work my grandmother put into her garden.
Originally Posted by Poindexter,Jul 29 2005, 03:15 AM
Thanks everyone 
That is an IR filter with ND + Polarizer on my Sony DSC-F717. I used photoshop to crop them a little because IR photography gets messy on the edges. Someone was asking about heat detection in the photo - that is Thermal photography - stupid expensive stuff
- IR blocks out part of the light spectrum (or pulls from only certain parts of the light spectrum depending how you define it). This may help:
Sides are GP Sports clones, bought when GP Sports was rumored to be out of business. One day the whole kit is coming off as the car goes into a full Mugenization 

That is an IR filter with ND + Polarizer on my Sony DSC-F717. I used photoshop to crop them a little because IR photography gets messy on the edges. Someone was asking about heat detection in the photo - that is Thermal photography - stupid expensive stuff
- IR blocks out part of the light spectrum (or pulls from only certain parts of the light spectrum depending how you define it). This may help:
Originally Posted by CoCam: IR Photography FAQ
Infrared photography uses films that are sensitive to both the light we can see and some of the longer length (above 700 nm) infra-red radiation. The film is also sensitive in the UV region (below 400 nm). In the case of the Kodak HIE film it is sensitive to near-infrared radiation out to approximately 1000 nm wavelength (1 micron). There are scientific uses for such films which include forensic applications and aerial crop and forest surveys. The film is also used in the restoration and investigation of paintings, but here the focus is on expanding our range of picture making media.
Some people just try infrared once as a novelty, others get hooked on the effects and exploit it as their main film, especially Kodak's High Speed Infrared black and white film.
Some people just try infrared once as a novelty, others get hooked on the effects and exploit it as their main film, especially Kodak's High Speed Infrared black and white film.

Hahagreat pics
Edwin




