@Amy Nelson has been getting me excited for a while with he IR work, and I have wanted to help contribute to the IR forum. So I finally ordered a 720nm IR filter that screws on in front of the lens. I had a vague recollection from my old film days that IR filters were basically like sticking a 10 stop ND on your lens. So my 1/200th of a sec exposures without changing anything but screwing on the IR filter, my exposure became 30 secs and often having to go up 1 stop in ISO.
So I got the filter in on the weekend and took it with me to the Antelope Valley Poppy Field area. After the sunrise was over I decided to play with the IR for a while.
First off, the image is now red in color. White Balance changes are needed and other editing of channels and stuff. I tried looking up processing of IR photos with Photoshop, I found nothing. Just lot's of click bait that in the end didn't tell me a thing. So about all I could do was play around and see if I could come up with something that felt like IR. I did change the WB in camera to k as that seemed right from what I had read.
If anyone has a tutorial that covers Photoshop instead of Lightroom, that would be awesome.
So I will post the normal view of what I shot, the IR view from in camera with a WB change to k, and then my edits.
Please, all help would be awesome. If you want to download the IR out of the Camera and show what could be done, please help.
Jim
#1 Original - No IR Filter
(Straight out of the camera)
#2 - With IR 720nm Filter - WB changed in camera to k
(Without the WB change it looked very similar just more Red all over and less Pink)
#3 - After my Playing around in Photoshop with no clue as to what I was doing.
#4 - Added - A version with a Color Swap. Swapping the Red and Blue channels.
Looks like your surely on the right track.
Here are some steps to take to get you image to the creative processing in Photoshop:
1. Critical to get a proper white balance in camera. Do this by setting your custom white balance and using a gray paper (use one that is the same tone as the middle of the grayscale). Set this up in the lighting conditions that you intend on shooting in. (minimum K) You can tweak the WB afterwards in Camera Raw by selecting the WB eye dropper and click from the upper top corner to the opposite bottom corner.
2. You need to set up a DNG profile creation (for RAW editing)
- Go to Adobe Download Editor and down load
- Have to create it specific to the camera your using.
- Open an image and just go to Save Option and save to what ever is easiest for you to find. Call it “IR Conversion a” or what ever the model of your camera is and save it as a .DNG file format (the rest of the screen should be standard ie. Format “Digital Negative”.
- Open DNG Profile Editor -> then open your DNG image that you saved.
- Go to Color Matrices and drop the White Balance Calibration all the way down to -100
- Go to Town Curve and put a point at the center and in the input box type 126 and in the output box type 116. The will help keep you image at proper exposure even after the Color Matrices have been changed.
- Go to Color Tables and make sure your Base Profile is set to Adobe Standard (*Camera Make* ILCE-*Model*, example Adobe Standard (Sony ILCE-).
- Go to File --> Export Sony ILCE-? () Profile – export to C:\YOUR USER NAME HERE\AADATA\ROAMING\ADOBE\CAMERA RAW\ CAMERAPROFILES (sugest calling the profile Sony a Recipe.dcp) – using your camera model number.
- If you go to Camera RAW or Light Room under and click on Profile Browser it will show up under “Profiles” ie..IR Conversion Sony a. Select the profile and close. Going back to basic development and adjust your image as needed. (at this point your image will go from pink/red to ugly yellow/blue)
3. Red/Blue Channel Swap (can be done at RAW level with a LUT Profile).
- Open in Photoshop
- Go to Channel Mixer and:
- Red Output Channel: change red to 0% and blue to +100%
- Blue Output Channel: change red to +100% and blue to 0%
- This is the traditional Red/Blue Color swap that gives you blue skies and yellowish foreground. ( you can save this in your Channel Mixer Presets)
- Go to File - Export --> Export Color Look Up Table --> save as “RB Swap 1” (set Grid Points to 32 / Medium and Format check Cube. (save somewhere convenient) this creates a LUT you can use under Adjustments --> LUTS
- You can create a XMP file to use in LR or ACR. (which is handy in you RAW adjustments)
- You can do these same steps to make other flavors for Profiles in Raw processing. (I can explain this farther if interested, but just down have the time right now.)
4. Creative Processing in Photoshop
- Much like the standard processing as a normal image. (how ever you see the image in you minds eye)
Hi Jim (Fox) et al -
Sorry I've been AWOL for a few days... been busy with some other stuff. But I'm baaaack now, and I agree with pretty much everything folks have posted on this thread so far. However, I also have a couple suggestions which should provide some additional simplification with in-camera capture and getting a usable white balance in postprocessing.
IR Image Capture. The method Jim F. used to capture his IR image can work, but in general it’s not the optimum way to get IR photos from a digital camera.
The reason for that is that all digital cameras come with a filter over their sensor that blocks IR wavelengths. Without such a filter, the IR light that the sensor naturally captures would mess up the colors in every image. The filter is required to make sure the camera captures the same colors your eye sees.
When you place an IR filter (one that selectively passes IR light but blocks visible light) over the camera’s lens, you then have two filters in the light path that are fighting each other. The net result is that very little light of any wavelength gets through, meaning that you typically will need exposure times measured in minutes. If the IR-passing filter on the lens is stronger than the IR-blocking filter on the sensor, you will indeed end up with an “IR” image (one where the exposure is mostly the result of IR wavelengths), but with such long exposures, any movement in your subject or scene will cause blurring, which you most likely don’t want.
Most folks who shoot digital IR images, therefore, go with a different solution. They get a camera converted to IR, meaning that the stock IR-blocking filter over the sensor is replaced with one that passes IR and blocks some or all visible wavelengths. With this arrangement, the sensor is (more or less) as sensitive to light as it was before, meaning that really long exposures are not needed.
The underlying sensor still has red, green, and blue photosites, however, and the IR-passing filter doesn’t completely block those wavelengths. So the sensor still produces some color information (how much depends, among other things, on the cutoff wavelength of the new filter over the sensor, as noted by @beavens above). This allows you to get color IR images.
White Balance Issues. The problem many folks encounter when they're new at processing raw images from a converted IR camera is that the default range for white balance adjustments in Adobe Camera Raw and Lightroom is not wide enough to get a good white balance with these images. It's unfortunate that Adobe has placed that limitation on the WB adjustment, but that's the way it is. I struggled with this for months after I started working with files from my newly converted IR camera years ago, until someone alerted me to a simple workaround.
With about 10-15 minutes of effort, you can create a custom WB profile to use in ACR or LR for your IR camera, install that profile on your computer, and then apply it ever afterwards when processing raw images from your IR camera. And when you apply your custom profile to an image, it greatly widens the range of the WB adjustment in ACR or Lightroom, giving you plenty of adjustment room to get the colors you want from your IR camera's raw files. Once you've installed the custom profile on your computer, it takes essentially no additional time to apply it to every IR image you subsequently process.
Here's what you need to do:
1. First, download the Adobe DNG Profile Editor for Windows here:
https://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/product.jsp?product=195&platform=Windows
...or for Mac here:
https://www.adobe.com/support/downloads/detail.jsp?ftpID=
2. Then, pick any raw image (it doesn't matter which one) from your IR camera and convert it to a DNG file (use Adobe's free dng converter for this).
3. Then, using that dng file, follow the instructions in this video for creating a custom WB profile for that camera:
NOTE: The instructor in the video says the technique is for Nikon cameras, but in fact it will work for any digital camera.
4. Once installed, that profile will then work for ANY raw image from that camera model (it doesn't have to be a dng image). Just apply the profile when processing the raw file via Adobe Camera Raw or Lightroom, and then use the usual sliders to adjust the WB, saturation, etc. to your heart’s content. It won’t take you any more time to do this than it does for images from a visible light camera. If you someday get a different model of IR camera, just repeat the process to create and install a new WB profile for that camera.
Hope that helps... and enjoy!
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