CerpRem Posted June 27, 2023 Share Posted June 27, 2023 Multispectral photography was one of the things I was really excited to try when I finally got a UV-pass filter, and the other week I finally had some free time to go out and try it Editing took took a pretty long time (definitely a much different workflow than I'm used to), but I'm very happy with the results! I love the colors of the brush in the foreground, I think they're more nuanced than regular false-color IR with a Red25 (or similar) filter. I want to try this again on a clearer day, since the haze is definitely not being kind to the shorter wavelengths IR -> R Red -> G UV -> B Raw frames processed in Darktable, then mostly aligned with the Align_Image_Stack tool from Hugin (but the left part of the panorama needed some extra hand-alignment in Gimp since Hugin couldn't do it perfectly). Then composed in Gimp, into Hugin to stitch the two together, and finally processed further in Darktable Taken on a FS Sony A5000 with a Sigma 19mm f/2.8 DN And here are the individual IR, Vis, and UV shots: Vis (TSN575): IR (850nm): (it always amazes me how well IR is able to punch through haze!) UV (ZWB2 + TSN575): Link to comment
lukaszgryglicki Posted June 27, 2023 Share Posted June 27, 2023 Very nice results, I always have problems with aligning 3 separate photos ... Link to comment
Fedia Posted June 28, 2023 Share Posted June 28, 2023 I really like the result, it's a very nice colorful image and you did a great job aligning the images. I see you used the TSN575 as a hot mirror, and then used the red channel as your visible layer. But it seams the TSN575 (that I also own) doesn't really pass red. So I'm not sure that what was recorded in your red channel is actual red light. It could be yellow rather (and maybe even some green and blue light leaks). Link to comment
Kai Posted July 4, 2023 Share Posted July 4, 2023 Interesting and impressive work! Thank you for sharing. Link to comment
Andrea B. Posted July 9, 2023 Share Posted July 9, 2023 That is a cool RGB stack. Fun, isn't it? I'm not sure quite how it would affect the final stack, but I see that there is quite a lot of false color in the foreground of the UV photo if you increase the saturation. The foliage has a lot of green and the path has some blue. Link to comment
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