I say “we” referring to the more than 600 participants in the Facebook Group I created about a year ago. Created with the 11 Pro Max, Camera+2, RAW, processed with iOS editor and SnapSeed I discovered how to make infrared images with my iPhone! In the beginning, there was a lot of trial and error and a few screaming pixels, but today, with all we’ve learned, well, we’re getting great results. Last year with the help of friends, and a lot of research and experimentation, that dream became a reality. I love the iPhone’s portability and, with today’s iPhones, I’m not sacrificing much in the way of image quality.įor years now, I’ve dreamed of making IR images with my iPhone. While I love shooting with my “big” cameras, I’ve had a love affair with the iPhone since getting my first, iPhone 4, in 2010. Created with the 12 Pro Max, Native Camera, ProRAW, and Night Mode, processed in Lightroom for Mobile Modern digital processing helps to get those bright whites and rich blacks, and we can even add that soft ethereal glow so characteristic of early film IR.įor the past seven years or so I’ve made images first with a LUMIX DMC LX7 point-and-shoot, and later with a Fuji X-T1, both converted to 720nm infrared. By modifying a camera, removing the high-pass filter, we can now have a camera dedicated to infrared. Infrared became a lot easier in the digital age. I fell in love with this depiction of the world around me and was drawn into these snowy white fantasies. Infrared photography, the black and white variety, first captured my imagination in college many moons ago. Created with the 12 Pro Max, Native Camera, ProRAW, and Night Mode, processed on the desktop in Luminar 4 with plugins Topaz DeNoise AI, Sharpen AI, and Nik Silver Efex Pro 2
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