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daniel_fernandes

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Everything posted by daniel_fernandes

  1. <p>Apologies, the link to the image in the first post is broken. Here it is again:<br /><br /></p> <div></div>
  2. <p>Thanks! I am considering indeed buying a new filter, but would like to understand if this one is actually in good condition or it is came faulty.<br> Lex Jenkins, yes, I have used Lightroom and I have tried the usual trick. I followed a couple of websites, but this one sums it up (http://photography.tutsplus.com/tutorials/an-in-depth-guide-to-infrared-photography-processing--photo-9540).<br> In terms of the D3200 being sensitive to IR, I tried the remote trick and it captured the light (http://s28.postimg.org/uqwvw17ct/DSC_0710.jpg). I do not have access to those filters you named, so is there any other way I can test that? All I have is a ND8, ND1000, and a [cheap] IR720 :)<br /><br /></p>
  3. <p>Hello everyone,<br> I have just started to try IR photography with my Nikon D3200 and a "cheap Ebay filter" IR720 from a brand called "digital HD", or "dHD".<br />I have tried it out twice already and none of the times I got the white vegetation like it was supposed to.<br />The filter looks more like a simple red filter than actually IR. Any ideas? Can it be the WB? I tried to set it with the patch-of-grass technique. Can be filter be of too bad quality, letting in a lot more visible light than actually IR? I read that the wavelength of these cheap filter is not as precise as a Hoya, so maybe this one is just too close to visible light.</p> <p>Thanks for any input! I'm happy to provide any other files and any other info!<br> (Here is one of my last tries, shot in RAW, after using custom WB profile with (DNG profile editor), plus Blue/Red channel invertion in photoshop)</p> <p><img src="https://lh3.googleusercontent.com/Zb_hLNvbP7xxSPCS6Ludyd6myjGYyj1Tm6D8341VpqW823wLLgkBCzjAuOkUDIdsCAicLAp1hvE=w1280-h544" alt="" width="819" height="544" /></p>
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