Your infrared pictures
As mentioned in last week's post it's the 100th anniversary of the first published infrared photograph and to mark that I asked you to send in your infrared pictures and so here's a selection of them.
The photograph at the top of this page is by Mike Curry who has had some success in photographic competitions with his infrared photography. The picture struck me as an excellent example of the genre. At first glance it looks like snow has fallen on the Greenwich landscape; it's this double-take and strong composition that make it a fascinating photo. You can see more of .
The photograph below was taken by Dr Dean Waters who said: "This was taken on the now discontinued Kodak High Speed Infrared film through a Wratten 89b filter of my local church in Hemingbrough, North Yorkshire."
Marcia Petterson initially started working with digital but then moved on to infrared film creating pictures that were then lith-printed and toned.
Jim Kramer is an amateur photographer from Cincinnati, Ohio, who shoots with a digital camera that has been converted to record the near-infrared spectrum. His colour images are striking, everything is not as the eye would expect. You can see a range of .
Paul Richards tells me he has only been shooting infrared for a short while but is finding it addictive. You can see a range of his .
Robert DeCandido sent in this picture of an Egret in Central park, New York.
David S Hendry took this picture of Rouken Glen with a Sony Alpha 100 camera fitted with a Hoya R72 filter.
Xon Fedaa shoots colour infrared in .
Ade Cocker used a Canon 450D with an infrared filter attached to capture this pictures of Mill End Lock in Buckinghamshire.
Don't forget that the is planning a two-day symposium on Infrared photography in London in October 2010.
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