Rollei Infrared with & without an IR720 filter

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 17 окт 2024

Комментарии • 7

  • @SamCyanide
    @SamCyanide 10 месяцев назад +1

    Thanks for the video, helped me get some ideas

  • @thomaspopple2291
    @thomaspopple2291 5 месяцев назад

    Rollei ir film is best shot at iso 6 if you want the woody effect.

  • @Knapster4444
    @Knapster4444 Год назад

    I’m gonna put in a roll and shoot at 400 iso and push or pull and just use the film. I’ve shot it with a filter before but I don’t have that camera with me.

  • @Paul-fm3cf
    @Paul-fm3cf 4 года назад

    You say that you've read shooting through an IR filter requires about 5 extra stops of exposure and that that's exactly what your meter said, yet earlier in your video you say the unfiltered shot was at 1/125 and the filtered one was 1/8. That's only 4 stops over, not 5.

    • @jamesvdm
      @jamesvdm  4 года назад +2

      It varied between 4-6 stops depends on the scene. I let the meter do it’s thing because I had no experience with the film or filter. I love that the Pentax imprints the exposure info for later reference.

    • @Paul-fm3cf
      @Paul-fm3cf 4 года назад +2

      Thanks for the reply. I find it amazing that the meter works at all through the filter. I read it on Photrio a week or so ago, and now you say the same thing. When I shot Ilford SFX200 (I know, not a true infrared film) through an IR filter with my NII a couple years ago, I wouldn't have dreamed of simply metering through the filter. Good to know for future reference that I can though :)

    • @Superbustr
      @Superbustr 2 года назад

      ​@@Paul-fm3cf Check the EV rating for any cameras with in body metering to see how sensitive the meter is. Some cameras like my FE2 in aperture priority mode will keep the shutter open essentially as long as needed until the exposure has been made or until the button batteries run out of power.