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Nikon DSLR Cameras
Out of Production DSLRs
D90
Successful D90 IR WB finally
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<blockquote data-quote="BackdoorArts" data-source="post: 550487" data-attributes="member: 9240"><p>I do a LOT of IR so I've got some Q's.</p><p>1. Are you using a converted camera or external filter? <em>assuming a filter by the "long shutter speed" comment</em></p><p>2. What wavelength filter? <em>appears to be 590nm - maybe 665nm</em></p><p>3. Are you shooting RAW or JPEG?</p><p></p><p>In-camera WB is nice, but not critical if you're shooting RAW and processing with Photoshop. I shoot with a converted D7000 and D800 (both at 720nm) and while I can achieve an in-camera WB for a JPEG, but I shoot RAW and couldn't get PS to replicate it until I created a customer camera profile for each...</p><p></p><p>[MEDIA=youtube]VpHo1Fw23to[/MEDIA]</p><p></p><p>I can assure you that shooting RAW is the way to go with IR, regardless if you're using a filter or conversion. If you've avoided it because of the WB issue then try creating the custom profile - it's a piece of cake.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="BackdoorArts, post: 550487, member: 9240"] I do a LOT of IR so I've got some Q's. 1. Are you using a converted camera or external filter? [I]assuming a filter by the "long shutter speed" comment[/I] 2. What wavelength filter? [I]appears to be 590nm - maybe 665nm[/I] 3. Are you shooting RAW or JPEG? In-camera WB is nice, but not critical if you're shooting RAW and processing with Photoshop. I shoot with a converted D7000 and D800 (both at 720nm) and while I can achieve an in-camera WB for a JPEG, but I shoot RAW and couldn't get PS to replicate it until I created a customer camera profile for each... [MEDIA=youtube]VpHo1Fw23to[/MEDIA] I can assure you that shooting RAW is the way to go with IR, regardless if you're using a filter or conversion. If you've avoided it because of the WB issue then try creating the custom profile - it's a piece of cake. [/QUOTE]
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Nikon DSLR Cameras
Out of Production DSLRs
D90
Successful D90 IR WB finally
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