Timber Posted September 24, 2014 Share Posted September 24, 2014 My first multispectral tries. Unfortunately the lenses I've used have quite a big focus shift, and the weather was quite windy, so not as good as I hoped for... but I still quite like them :D Equipment: Sony NEX 6 with Spectrosil 2000 Fused Silica Gel, E. Ludwig Meritar 50mm f2.9 & RMC Tokina 28 f2.8 lenses Filter: UV: Hoya U360 2mm + Schott BG40 2mm, VIS: Schott BG40 2mm, IR: Zomei (LOL) 950 Light Source: Sunlight, windy and cloudy day Converter: UV and IR converted to B&W in Lightroom and then the 3 image stacked together in Photoshop. IR - Red, VIS - Green, UV - Blue, Luminosity was given by the IR shot most of the time. http://clancode.hu/!uv/multi1.jpg http://clancode.hu/!uv/multi2.jpg http://clancode.hu/!uv/multi3.jpg http://clancode.hu/!uv/multi4.jpg http://clancode.hu/!uv/multi5.jpg Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted September 24, 2014 Share Posted September 24, 2014 Love the last one. It is also a temporal stack, one of my favorites kind of stacks. "-) Link to comment
JCDowdy Posted September 29, 2014 Share Posted September 29, 2014 That is a neat observation!Now that you called attention to it, looking closely they all have a bit of temporal stacking. Link to comment
nfoto Posted September 29, 2014 Share Posted September 29, 2014 Cannot be avoided to include the temporal dimension when filters have to be shuffled around manually :) Link to comment
JCDowdy Posted September 29, 2014 Share Posted September 29, 2014 The clock shows it was done rather spritely Link to comment
nfoto Posted September 29, 2014 Share Posted September 29, 2014 Timber is evidently a fast operator and an accomplished filter swapper :) Link to comment
Timber Posted September 30, 2014 Author Share Posted September 30, 2014 I always started with the VIS image (BG40) so then I only have to put the UV pass (U360) for UV shot. Then just swap them with the IR (Zomei IR950)... The Big Ben was actually a slow one as I had to wait for the traffic too. I'd say each stack took roughly 2 minutes. Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted September 30, 2014 Share Posted September 30, 2014 It's the moving people which are great fun in the last photo. There was a fellow I haven't heard from in a long time who made some lovely software for multi-spectral stacks. It could quite crank them out in amazing variations. Super cool !!! See Ben Lincoln's Detailed Into to Multispectral Photography and Uses of Multispectral Photography Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted September 30, 2014 Share Posted September 30, 2014 Forgot the link to the software itself by Ben Lincoln: http://www.beneaththewaves.net/Software/The_Mirrors_Surface_Breaks.html Link to comment
Timber Posted September 30, 2014 Author Share Posted September 30, 2014 Thanks Andrea... it was an interesting read! As of now I don't have a beam splitter and I am not sure if I am planning to invest in one in the near future (yet I would love to take it to Philippines next year) so I think I am stick to the temporal ones... all I can do is perfecting my filter swapping technique... maybe one day I can get so quick it will be almost beam splitter like :) Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted September 30, 2014 Share Posted September 30, 2014 I though you might also enjoy the software which does the stacking. "-) Link to comment
Alex H Posted September 30, 2014 Share Posted September 30, 2014 ... I can get so quick it will be almost beam splitter like :D Filter wheel? Link to comment
Timber Posted September 30, 2014 Author Share Posted September 30, 2014 Filter wheel?naaah... that's cheating! Actually I only have 67mm filters atm... 1 BG40, 1 U360, 1 IR720, 1 IR950. Finding a filter wheel this size is impossible and would be huge so I'd be afraid that MET will stop me because they mistake it for a Tommy gun :D Sooner or later I will try beam splitting (and that time I will keep bombarding you with questions :D), until then I enjoy the colorful people and cars :) Link to comment
cmoody Posted October 1, 2014 Share Posted October 1, 2014 One thing we're looking at is "Xume filter adapters". They're magnetic filter rings. Provided they are secure enough, it could facilitate swapping between a visible and UV filter quite nicely and quickly!Annoyingly there are only a few different diameters available :D Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted October 1, 2014 Share Posted October 1, 2014 Those Xumes do look interesting. But I would fear that the magnetic "clonk" of attaching such a filter would upset any preset focus or camera angle in those cases where I was trying to make "matching" UV/Vis/IR photos for multispectral stacks. Of course for other work, that wouldn't matter. Some of us used to use old Nikon A-type filter holders similar to this: http://www.bhphotovi...s=REG&A=detailsThe old one had an internal ring for screwing in round filters.We would hand mount the Visible filter on the lens, make the shot, remove filter and then flip up the UV filter which was permanently mounted in the holder. At least this gave one quickly mounted filter. Link to comment
OlDoinyo Posted November 4, 2014 Share Posted November 4, 2014 If you want real simultaneity, you could use a multi-camera rig with a common trigger, perhaps something like J.W. Wong's beamsplitter box, which has no parallax: https://www.flickr.com/photos/jw_wong/4704529569/ Link to comment
Alex H Posted November 4, 2014 Share Posted November 4, 2014 J.W. Wong's rig only takes two pictures, while these are three-shot composites. Link to comment
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