Showing posts with label infrared photography. Show all posts
Showing posts with label infrared photography. Show all posts
Sunday, November 14, 2010
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Tashi Choling
Tashi Choling
(c) Darlene Lyon Kruse, All Rights Reserved
Last week Bill Exley, a friend and photographer, and I spent the morning photographing in the Colestine Valley, a rural valley south of Ashland that straddles the Oregon-California border. We were treated to old barns at historic farms, railroad tracks, and the serenity of the meditation garden at the Tashi Choling Center for Buddhist Studies.
This photograph is of the pond. To the right you can see prayer flags and the top of a roofed area that houses one of the three statues in the garden. I love the contrast of light and dark in this photo. And the feathery-ness of the trees. I have a feeling of serenity and balance when I look at it.
Metadata: Nikon D90 camera converted for infrared. 14-24mm f/2.8 Nikkor lens at 18mm (35-mm equivalent = 27mm). Hand-held. ISO 320. 1/320" at f/11. This photograph was made at 11:20 AM PDT.
All the post-processing work was done in Lightroom. I converted it to black and white. In the point curve box, I selected strong contrast. In the Color/HSL box, I adjusted the red, orange and yellow. I also experimented with adding grain, hoping to make it look a bit more like infrared film. I used the split toning option again -- I really like that look. This time I selected a gold/mocha-like color (hue 22; saturation 18) for the highlights. For the shadows, I chose lilac (hue 271, saturation 18). I placed the balance slider at +70. And then added a vignette.
Thanks for coming by to take a look -- I hope you like it. It's a beautiful, peaceful, serene place. I hope I've done justice to it. ~ darlene
Sunday, October 3, 2010
Up, Up & Away
Montague Balloon Festival, Montague, California
(c) Darlene Lyon Kruse - All Rights Reserved
This was my first time to go to the hot-air balloon festival in the small ranching community of Montague in Northern California. It's an annual event on the last weekend in September so this won't be my last time to go there. What a great time!! A fabulous backdrop provided by rolling hills. Large enough to be interesting and still easy to find places to park, easy to get great shots of the balloons.
This photo was made on Saturday, September 25, the second day of the festival. Ascension was at sunrise (roughly 7AM). This photo was made about an hour later. What I liked about it enough to want to work with it was the position of the two balloons, the foothills in the background, and the two people in the left foreground. Everything works for me.
This is an infrared photograph. The lack of the bright white foliage so typical of infrared comes, I think, from two elements -- one, there isn't alot of foliage and, two, the early morning light meant less infrared radiation in the environment. Here are the details:
Camera: Nikon D90 converted to capture invisible light (infrared). 14-24mm f/2.8 Nikkor lens at 24mm. ISO 160. 1/200" at f/13. Hand-held.
Post-Processing. I developed this image in Lightroom. The steps were: Converted to black & white. In the Tone Curve panel, I selected "Strong Contrast" (a personal preference -- I like stronger contrast for most of my infrared photographs), lightening the lights and darkening the blacks. In the split toning panel, I used my usual color combination of bronze for the highlights and mauve for the shadows. (Highlights: bronze set at 37 for hue and 37 for saturation. Shadows: mauve set at 261 for hue and 20 for saturation. Balance set at +52). Kodak HIE (high speed infrared film) had a lovely grain to it and so I played around with the Grain feature in Lightroom 3 to see if I could come close to what film used to do. This is my first try with it and I'm mostly pleased -- I'll keep playing with it though. And then of course I finished off with a little vignetting in the corners.
I hope you enjoy this image.
Tuesday, September 14, 2010
Oregon's oldest lighthouse
Cape Blanco Lighthouse (infrared)
(c) Darlene Lyon Kruse - All Rights Reserved
The Cape Blanco Lighthouse is Oregon's oldest continuously operating lighthouse AND its most westerly. Poised on the point of a bluff six miles north of Port Orford, Oregon, with no protection from south, north or west, the winds can be fierce. The fresnel lens was lit for the first time on December 20, 1970. The lighthouse is still active today. You can learn more about this exquisite lighthouse here http://www.lighthousefriends.com/light.asp?ID=125
Besides being Oregon's oldest and most westerly lighthouse, it is also elegant -- with beautiful lines and textures. From any angle, it presents an intriguring, strong, beautiful face to all who visit her.
This photograph was made during the workshop David Lorenz Winston and I co-led in August. When we arrived at the lighthouse, it was enshrouded in fog, barely visible from the road. The fog lifted, allowing us to photograph it with fog swirling around it and then completely clear of fog. In all kinds of weather, the lighthouse at Cape Blanco never disappoints.
While this is very much a photograph of the lighthouse, the addition of the people interacting with the lighthouse -- one entering, one leaving -- was important to me. For my eye, other photographs made at the same time but without people lack the power and emotion of this image.
About this photograph. This is an infrared (invisible light) photograph made with my newly-converted Nikon D90, using my 14-24 mm f/2.8 Nikkor lens at 21-mm (35-mm equivalent = 33mm). Minimal post-processing: I converted the image to grayscale and increased the blacks, clarity & contrast to enhance the black-white contrast.
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