Nice, I find myself with infrared and pinhole photography fussing with the meter and using the different apps but in the end it always give it about 10 seconds or round about a half a minute. Total guess work in the end. But always fun.
Nice shot Lee. Those new leaves came out beautiful against the dark sky. I haven’t used infrared before and I’ve heard it can be tricky to work with. Might give it go now. Cheers.
Great video and wonderful result too! I'm really intrigued by something, how this could work... You are using a 850nm filter but the Rollei is sensitive to wavelengths up to 820nm (as per datasheet). Surprising!
Thomas Thankyou. Glad you enjoyed it. I know that a 720nm is suggested but remember reading somewhere that it could be pushed with a 850nm for a more dramatic effect. Very long exposures but seemed to work ok !
@@LeePengellyPhotography It sure did! Better than OK it's wonderful! Based on the datasheet I would just now have even tried it. It indeed looks more dramatic than 720 filter. Looking forward to see some more :)
Just found the video... at 3:02 I can see an early Fujinon W in a Seiko 0 shutter, either the 125mm, 135mm or 150mm f5.6 (hard to tell, they all look about the same and have a 46mm front filter). The show notes say you used a Schneider 150 f6.8?
Thanks for the great video! I always thought the Rollei Infrared can be shot only with 720nm filter. May I ask you where you found the exposure data for "darker" infrared filters?
Thanks Stefan glad you enjoyed this one. To be honest I can’t remember only that I spent hours trawling the internet for an answer and found it in a random blog by someone.....that and some experimentation!!
Enevan1968 👍I know that exposing at the films native speed then adding on the filter compensation brings you too the same result ie; iso 12. The filter has the added bonus of giving the greens and blues more contrast.
Lee, if your having trouble loading because the film is thin check out a video on Arista Ortho Litho film. It's 'All Aspects Photography'. Great videos, during the video he talks about ruining a lot of film and he shows how to mark your dark slides so you don't take them out to far. You can then avoid scratching. I have used it when shooting Ortho Litho film and have not had much trouble scratching the film. When I load the film I leave the dark slides almost all the way in. Then I take them most of the way out when I shoot, but leave them in and lose a small amount of my frame. Watch his video and you'll see. He has lots of great vids. Hope this helps. I just got a box of Rollie Infrared 400, 4X5. Can't wait to get out with it. Thanks for your video.
Charlie Brown Hi thanks for your comment and your sub, much appreciated 😊 The 6minute exposure relates to 15stops plus a little extra exposure. When up in the minutes each stop difference doubles the exposure time so that extra 2 minutes was a small difference but doesn’t really affect the stops I calculated. Hope that makes sense 😬
".... more scratches then Run-D.M.C." ... instant like just for that comment! :D
Yo! Ha thanks 😂👍
Thanks.
Nice, I find myself with infrared and pinhole photography fussing with the meter and using the different apps but in the end it always give it about 10 seconds or round about a half a minute. Total guess work in the end. But always fun.
Thanks. I’m using a filter adjustment app now makes life easier.
Nice shot Lee. Those new leaves came out beautiful against the dark sky. I haven’t used infrared before and I’ve heard it can be tricky to work with. Might give it go now. Cheers.
Cheers Craig 👍 definitely worth trying it but I would load and unload in a blacked out room rather than a bag !!😬
Excellent!! Well worth the effort, I would say! Very inspiring!
Robert Gulley Thankyou Robert I really appreciate your comment 😊
More scratches than Run DMC. Hah!
Great guide, enjoyed the steps shown, especially the analysis of the negatives👍 Mark.
Mark Whelan Thankyou Mark glad you enjoyed this one 😊
Good stuff Lee!
Andrew Frost Thankyou Andrew, I got there in the end!!😊
Great video and wonderful result too!
I'm really intrigued by something, how this could work... You are using a 850nm filter but the Rollei is sensitive to wavelengths up to 820nm (as per datasheet). Surprising!
Thomas Thankyou. Glad you enjoyed it.
I know that a 720nm is suggested but remember reading somewhere that it could be pushed with a 850nm for a more dramatic effect. Very long exposures but seemed to work ok !
@@LeePengellyPhotography It sure did! Better than OK it's wonderful! Based on the datasheet I would just now have even tried it. It indeed looks more dramatic than 720 filter. Looking forward to see some more :)
I’ve just bought a Bronica SQA 6x6cm and hoping to try some more infrared with it soon
Just found the video... at 3:02 I can see an early Fujinon W in a Seiko 0 shutter, either the 125mm, 135mm or 150mm f5.6 (hard to tell, they all look about the same and have a 46mm front filter). The show notes say you used a Schneider 150 f6.8?
I mix it up with an old Schneider 90mm I had, my error 🤦🏻♂️
Thanks for the great video! I always thought the Rollei Infrared can be shot only with 720nm filter. May I ask you where you found the exposure data for "darker" infrared filters?
Thanks Stefan glad you enjoyed this one. To be honest I can’t remember only that I spent hours trawling the internet for an answer and found it in a random blog by someone.....that and some experimentation!!
Nice video but you brits sure are very chatty. Lol
splashdownmodels Thanks.... we do go on a bit 😂😂
Lee, I don't know anymore where I got the info but it recommended an I.E. of ISO 12-25... Don't know if it will make a difference, though.
Enevan1968 👍I know that exposing at the films native speed then adding on the filter compensation brings you too the same result ie; iso 12. The filter has the added bonus of giving the greens and blues more contrast.
Enevan1968 Thankyou for the sub too. Hopefully more 4x5 coming once we’re through this crisis !
Lee, if your having trouble loading because the film is thin check out a video on Arista Ortho Litho film. It's 'All Aspects Photography'. Great videos, during the video he talks about ruining a lot of film and he shows how to mark your dark slides so you don't take them out to far. You can then avoid scratching. I have used it when shooting Ortho Litho film and have not had much trouble scratching the film. When I load the film I leave the dark slides almost all the way in. Then I take them most of the way out when I shoot, but leave them in and lose a small amount of my frame. Watch his video and you'll see. He has lots of great vids. Hope this helps. I just got a box of Rollie Infrared 400, 4X5. Can't wait to get out with it. Thanks for your video.
Charlie Brown Thanks I will take a look at this, much appreciated.
I like your video and shots. How many stops did the 6 minute exposure end up being? Thanks for sharing. I'm subscribing also.
Charlie Brown Hi thanks for your comment and your sub, much appreciated 😊
The 6minute exposure relates to 15stops plus a little extra exposure. When up in the minutes each stop difference doubles the exposure time so that extra 2 minutes was a small difference but doesn’t really affect the stops I calculated. Hope that makes sense 😬