Outdoor Photographer – September 2019

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background. I also didn’t want the noise
that a high ISO would cause. So I put the
camera on a tripod, set the ISO to 400,
stopped the lens down to ƒ/16 and chose
an exposure time of half a second—a far
cry from the 1/125 to 1/250 sec. range of
typical bright-light infrared shooting. The
slow speed blurred the relatively calm
water enough to “smear” the colors of the
reflection but kept the floating leaves sharp.
I was pretty surprised by what my cam-
era’s LCD showed me. The RAW capture
was darker and less saturated than the
image here, so after lightening it, I used
Photoshop’s individual color saturation
sliders to selectively increase the intensity
of the different colors in the reflection—
the orange from the sky and the blues
and greens of the foliage. (The natural
yellow of some of the floating leaves may
be due to their loss of chlorophyll, which
is what reflects near-infrared radiation
from plants.) The result has the feeling of
a true fall sunset in New England, except
that the sun was long gone.


Cypress Tendons,
Florida Everglades
I often use my color infrared camera to
shoot reflections in swamps. They offer
a dense scheme of visual layers and a
complex color palette, one created by
the superimposition of the lighter, green-
ish-blue foliage and the reddish sky on
the rich, tannin-stained water and silty
bottom. But when you expose for what’s
above the water—here, a bald cypress
trunk—those shadows and reflections
look very dark in the RAW capture. The
RAW file’s buried information came to
the rescue in this image, allowing me
to recover plenty of detail from them.
To start, I used sliders in Nikon Capture
NX-D to pull in both the highlights and
the shadows. The shadows were still
pretty flat and murky going into Photo-
shop, though.
To bring out the reflections of the
tree branches and brighten the water-
darkened bits of sky between them, I used
the on-the-fly masking capabilities of the
Viveza plug-in for Photoshop. By drop-
ping control points in various parts of the
reflection and adjusting the size of the con-
centric area they affect, I was able not only
to brighten it but also to locally increase


contrast and saturation, both of which are
reduced when you substantially lighten a
dark area. Along with brightness, contrast
and saturation, the sliders attached to each
control point allowed me to adjust indi-
vidual colors to make the reflection look
consistent throughout. Without Viveza, it
would have taken dozens of layer masks
to do this.

Tree At Sunrise, Bosque Del
Apache National Wildlife Refuge
Distant birds take only a supporting role
in this image from the Bosque, wintering
grounds for flocks of thousands. Despite
appearances, the day dawned with low
clouds that kept direct sun from lighting
up the scene. The light was so dim, in
fact, that I had to set an ISO of 1600 and
open up a bit from my preferred aperture
of ƒ/11 to ƒ/8. I used a shutter speed of
1/90 sec., fast enough to freeze some-
thing moving in the far distance.
Infrared saved the day, turning the
subject back into an intensely colored
sunrise. The foliage at the base of the
tree was unexpectedly drab though, so
once the image was in Photoshop, I used
Viveza to add green to it. I placed control
points at strategic spots along the bottom
of the image, expanded the circle just
enough to cover the foliage, then turned
up the green slider in the control stem
that extends from the point. I personally
have no qualms about such manipulation,
since I’ve never thought of myself as a
photographic realist!

Fairy Stone State Park, Virginia
Yet another case in which late-day light
was reinforced by color infrared’s red-
dening, this image gets its mirrored
effect from my having scrambled down
the riverbank at a bridge and shot from
a lower position. That perspective and
its more glancing angle strengthened the
reflection, helping to make the landforms
appear to float. It’s always a cool trick to
show the tree line in a reflection but crop
it out of the top of the frame; in this case,
infrared’s strong red sky is almost entirely
in the reflection, with just a little bit of the
real thing at the upper left.
The image took a lot of local work,
however. There was too much blue in the
brush at the top of the frame—and in its

reflection—so I used Saturation and Selec-
tive Color controls to make it greener. The
sun was relatively low, and the parts of
the riverbanks and surrounding ground
it couldn’t reach were flat-looking, so I
used Viveza control points to add local
contrast and density to them. The area
on the right was very bright, so I burned
it in, again with control points. (Color
infrared can be a very contrasty medium.)
The reflection in the water faded almost
to black toward the bottom, so I opened it
up and increased its contrast, which made
the trees’ reflections stand out all the way
to the edge of the frame.

Cypress Knees, Avery
Island, Louisiana
When I shot this picture on Louisi-
ana’s Avery Island, home of the Tabas-
co-making McIlhenny family, my
first thought was that I’d picked up
the reflection of its famous sauce. But
it was the usual red-hot infrared sky
reflected in the pools of a murky bayou,
which I cropped tight to place atten-
tion on the knobby “knees” that sprout
up from bald cypress tree roots. (They
never grow into trees!) I shot at a fair
distance from the subject with a 125mm
focal length, both to flatten it and to get
the more glancing angle I needed for
a good reflection. Given the relatively
long focal length, I stopped down to
ƒ/19 to ensure enough depth of field,
which required a shutter speed of 1/45
sec., tripod-mounted at ISO 400.
I toned down the red sky’s flaming
reflection in Photoshop, using the red
slider in Hue/Saturation, to give the image
a more naturalistic, sunset-like feeling.
Again, color infrared renders foliage with
a blue-green range in the RAW capture,
as shown in the leaves here. By contrast,
the cypress knees had more of a pure
blue cast that reminded me of the blue
you see in shadows and open shade on a
clear day, especially visible early and late.
So I actually used the blue slider in Hue/
Saturation to increase the blue, creating
a nice color contrast with the orange of
the reflection. OP

See more of Russell Hart’s work at
russellhartphoto.com.

outdoorphotographer.com September 2019 57
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