Menu
David Arnold Photography+
  • Home
  • Print Store
  • Experimental Originals
  • Blog
    • Frank Hurley, Antarctica, the Kodak Vest Pocket
    • Morning Glories: Lumen Print Making
    • Stones and Trees
    • Occasions
    • Churches of Stone
    • Borrowed Sources
    • A Point of Historical Interest—Toys Left for Julius.
    • Experimenting with Infrared Digital Capture
    • The Lego Camera: the Theory of Constraints For Creativity
    • Transfers
    • The Proposals Series
    • Experiments with Digital Noise
    • Experimenting with a Telephoto Lens
    • Using the Vest Pocket Kodak as an Experimental Lens
    • About The Experimental Condition
David Arnold Photography+

Tag: Full-spectrum photography

Experimenting with Infrared Full-Spectrum Photography

Posted on November 22, 2020

Early 19th-century photography was only able to record light falling in the blue and the ultraviolet portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. This very limited spectral range is best seen in the blank white skies in landscape photography in the mid-19th century. [1] By the 1880s and following the addition of sensitizing dyes to silver gelatin…

Subscribe to Blog via Email

Enter your email address to subscribe to this blog and receive notifications of new posts by email.

©David Arnold 2020