Photography

Friday, January 21, 2011

Infrared Photography






Australian photographer Naomi Frost is among the most talented artistic infrared photographers working today.  Her keen eye for composition carries over into the invisible parts of the light spectrum, resulting in images that are simultaneously reminiscent of bizarre nightmares, cherished memories, and fascinating unexplored worlds.



HDR Photography








HDR (high dynamic range) imaging is a relatively recent arrival on the digital photography scene.  Though the HDR technique was first developed in the 1930s, it has only recently been made possible for nearly any dedicated photographer.  With improved software and readily available instructions, HDR photography has been wildly gaining popularity.  Matthew Sullivan was introduced to HDR on the internet through another photographer’s work and has been experimenting with beautifully dynamic images ever since.





Infrared and HDR Photography









Infrared photography and HDR photography both yield amazing and unique results.  Some photographers are taking it a step further and combining these two methods.  Brokentaco is just one Flickr artist using infrared and HDR to create images that are visually stunning and incredibly detailed.
Infrared Photography

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Infrared photography photography picks up on infrared waves that are outside of the normal visible spectrum.  While far-infrared photography is used to display the heat emanating from objects, near-infrared photography creates haunting photographs with distorted colors.  The resulting images are familiar, but eerie because of their unusually rearranged colors.  The incredible infrared photographs of Dannie Tjahjono take ordinary landscape and still-life images and transform them into magical visions of otherwordly colors and unexpected shapes.  Landscape pictures in the full summer sun suddenly look like winter vistas covered in snow.  Cacti and garden statues look like the remnants from a post-apocalyptic society.








Infrared photography has a long history as a method of more accurately depicting landscape from an aerial perspective.  Though most aerial IR photographs are far-infrared (thermal imaging) pictures, some photographers use the near-infrared part of the light spectrum for stunning aerial photos.  The photography of Italian artist Christian Gufler combines two perspective-bending methods – IR and aerial – to create soft and tranquil images of European countryside and buildings.