@@AnalogueWonderland Just need someone to fly me up in their plane now ;-) Normally you would use the infrared sensitive aspect of the film to view areas of vegetation, as they reflect infrared light, nowadays this is done with a multispectral digital sensor
informative and useful vid as always Paul. (Though have to say it was hard to concentrate because I was trying to tell what that tattoo is on your arm... is that a chicken?!)
Loading it into disposables is a pretty neat idea - now I'm thinking about trying it in my my lomo simple use camera.
Thanks for the info, looking forward to shooting with it soon!
I love receiving Washi films in the box, fantastic company and product
I also studied earth observation at university, so this one is specifically interesting to me
@Eoghan Hennessy oh wow!! Would be interested in your professional opinion when you have results 😎
@@AnalogueWonderland Just need someone to fly me up in their plane now ;-)
Normally you would use the infrared sensitive aspect of the film to view areas of vegetation, as they reflect infrared light, nowadays this is done with a multispectral digital sensor
Thanks for the video.
What happened to the sound today?
yep we're having temporary mic issues!
Hi Paul, thanks for another great video. Which red filter would you recommend for this film, or does it really matter? Thank you.
Cool! :)
informative and useful vid as always Paul. (Though have to say it was hard to concentrate because I was trying to tell what that tattoo is on your arm... is that a chicken?!)
A robin! and an Olympus OM1 😜
It gives good results with tones that normally look the same? That's pretty cool. So it produces results that are not really.....wishy-washy then?
spot on 😂
@@AnalogueWonderland I love your videos. You're always so enthusiastic - it's great!
@@aminmotin aw thank you Amin!!