Dude, the artifacts at 5:36 are dope as hell. Honestly really love the filtered black and white shots as well. Awesome to see Rainier in the winter, makes me wanna book a flight!
Thank you bud! I really liked the black and white shots too. Trichrome photography really has shaped what filters I use in my standard black and white film photos, so I love showing the differences of each filter before the trichrome photo so the audience can also see the effects of each filter for their work. That Green filter I have though, it has got to go. As for rainier and snow go in in the fall or spring for the snow, the dead of winter most of the park is closed. This was filmed back in October, right around Halloween. I’m a very slow content creator, hahaha
Love the “you’re not cheating by using a digital camera” shade when referring to capturing infrared. Gave me a giggle. I love him too but recognize the crutch. Iykyk
Honestly I love his dedication to color infrared, I really do. His technique is a labor of love and honestly seems more complicated than trichrome photography, at least to me. As fun as it is to tease him that he used digital, he created a whole technique to capture the color infrared look which is super impressive. I rather play with my filters though, hahaha
It’s a little daunting for sure. Also gaff tape on any film windows on the door of the camera helps reduce the possibilities of any fogging. First time I did an infrared trichrome was with an Olympus OM-1 and it worked great, no need for the fancy stuff really. Please reach out if you have questions if you do decide to jump into infrared film! I’ll be happy to give any and all advice I can!
They end up looking a bit odd to be honest. The red filter does cut a lot of light out and with an infrared film stock, they do get a bit of the red glow, but not as much as if you used the R72.
Well done and well said! I love your videos, they vibe 🎉. I have been itching to try trichrome photography for a while. I think the shots came out spectacular. Nice lens too!
I know its a little expensive to get into it, but once you buy all the gear necessary you're only out that money once, unless you're like me and buy the filters twice so you can have them in two different sizes. Also thank you, I really proud of these images, I think they're the strongest ones I've captured yet, as well this new lens makes a huge difference I feel. That or I'm justifying spending the money still.
That be awesome! Just some standard trichromes, rather than infrared, would be a bit faster and would give you more variety in the artifacts that you’d pick up.