Thermal foto with Kodak 4900 IR filter removed

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Interesting. Have you tried adding a IR pass filter and taking day light photos? This looks like it might have a IR Pass filter on it already.

You might try a portrait in IR. There are a lot of resources on IR photography. It can be a lot of fun. Useful too. For example landscapes can be much sharper if taken in b/W IR. This is because Ir can cut through fog and haze better, so things are clear off into the distance.
 
Hello Pocketbeam, the Soldering Iron shot was done in complete darkness, therefore I did not need any filtering.

Below link toward the bottom of the page shows some of my outdoor photos with home made IR filter which is simply a folded paper 3d glasses so that blue and red filters were overlapping. I simply hold this folded 3d glasses in front of the camera.


http://www.wowturkey.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=8222&postdays=0&postorder=asc&start=10
 
Looks liek soem visible and some IR light. You could do much better with a better filter. One cheap one is the unexposed trick. Take some unexposed film and develope it, double it up, and you have a visible light filter, Ir pass filter. Search on the internet for more info and the exact film to use.
 
Yes, I heard about this film trick before, but I haven't tried it yet. But the way my filter reveals the details normaly not invisible to naked eye is quite exciting to me. On the second foto below the trees and clifs on top of the hills are becoming easily noticable. The changes on life saver guard watchtower is also very interesting.

http://wowturkey.com/t.php?p=http://dunyaturk.com/tr20/Yuzbasi_Volkan_Yuksel_IMG_5062ns.jpg

http://wowturkey.com/t.php?p=http://dunyaturk.com/tr20/Yuzbasi_Volkan_Yuksel_IMG_5066n_ir_s.jpg
 

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