Cindy Flood
Super Moderator
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Congratulations on the new camera. I especially like the shot of the orange tree!This is my first attempt at IR. These are the first pics I've taken in IR, and with my new A6000. Just a novice, of course, and I have a lot to learn, especially about post processing.
I just had a new Sony A6000 converted to dual spectrum by Kolari, and I am shooting with a Sigma 30mm f2.8.... my only lens so far. Any comments/ criticism is appreciated.
very strange cloud above our garden, late this afternoon ...
Never mind the darker vertical lines, caused by stitching the 4 pictures making up the panorama ...
Do you also see the eyes in the sky, or is it just me having had too much vodka ???
Good night,
Rafael
Thanks, Marc.Simply Magical Cindy!
Frank, I did not flip the channels in this one. I like the gold sky/blue foliage look sometimes and just decide to leave it that way. In this case, I liked the gold light on the trees because it looked warm, and I thought the blue boats looked good against the warm tones.Great photo. The subject matter is very interesting and the colors are surreal. Is there any way to make the sky a blue color without losing the other colors in this shot? I am referring to the "boats-1" in the Cypress swamp...sorry
I have so much to learn...keep up the great work, I enjoy seeing the photos and different techniques. I'm really getting an appreciation of IR from all the great photos posted in this forum.Thanks, Marc.
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Frank, I did not flip the channels in this one. I like the gold sky/blue foliage look sometimes and just decide to leave it that way. In this case, I liked the gold light on the trees because it looked warm, and I thought the blue boats looked good against the warm tones.
If you bring the photo (as it is now) to Photoshop and duplicate the layer, you can now flip the channels on the top layer and put a black mask on it (to hide the flipped channels). You are now looking at the original (unflipped) photo, and can paint blue into the sky and reflection without changing the rest of the photo.