Thread: Scarlet and infra red polution

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  1. #1 Scarlet and infra red polution 
    Hi l have seen it mentioned a problem regarding infra red pollution with scarlet, and blacks not being true blacks ! does this happen all the time. If not! why and when does it occur, l thought this would have been filtered out in the capture process, as this does not seem to happen with other single chip cameras, FS100 F3 or the new Canon C300 though those cameras are video not raw.
    Regards

    Scarlet-X 1549 "Neo" shortly upgrading to EPIC re NAB 2013
    Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 - Canon EF 16-35mm f2.8 L - Canon EF 24-70mm f2.8 L - Canon EF 24-105mm f4 L IS - Canon EF 70-200mm f4 L IS
    Canon EF 100-400mm f4.5-5.6 L IS - Canon EF 2x Converter MKIII
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  2. #2  
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    As I understand it this only happens when using certain ND filters, and is worsened when stacking certain ND filters. There are several IRND filters available that sound like they don't have the issue. Much more expensive though...
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  3. #3  
    Senior Member Joel Arvidsson's Avatar
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    It was a very nice video here with test of differnt nd filters. You might want to have a look at that. Did find the link thoe. Somebody else might chime in.
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  4. #4  
    Ok that makes sense, has any one tried the new variable Heliopan filters or can recommend a variable ND filter that does not cause infrared problems
    Regards

    Scarlet-X 1549 "Neo" shortly upgrading to EPIC re NAB 2013
    Tokina 11-16mm f2.8 - Canon EF 16-35mm f2.8 L - Canon EF 24-70mm f2.8 L - Canon EF 24-105mm f4 L IS - Canon EF 70-200mm f4 L IS
    Canon EF 100-400mm f4.5-5.6 L IS - Canon EF 2x Converter MKIII
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  5. #5  
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    Well there is a damn good thread on this in one of the EPIC/Red Discussion forums:

    http://www.reduser.net/forum/showthr...Filters-Advice

    It seems to be a very worthy discussion that all Scarlet users should be aware of....

    Apparently ALL digital-style cameras are much more sensitive to IR, NOT just RED. (Tho I understand the _original_ ie NON-MX_ RED ONE sensor was particularly sensitive.)
    Where this really comes apparent is when we start to use a lot of ND on our glass, necessary because of the great sensitivity (native 800ISO) of our sensors - most notably in daylight. Here's what mitigates this: as we start stacking NDs (or stronger NDs) onto the lens, it DOES cut down VISIBLE light, but NOT IR! So as we ND-up, the RATIO of IR increases to the point IR starts affecting color, notably in the blacks.

    As I recall, from a great test done on THIS blog;
    http://www.ryanewalters.com/Videos/Tests/tests.html ("Epic, IR tests")
    once you get past about .9 ND (which I'll admit I have NO idea what amount that really is, but presumably a factor indicated ON the filter?) you start to see this pollution problem.

    So the solution? We need to start incorporating IR filtration when using ND.
    And guess what? to make it even MORE complicated/annoying, some IR filters themselves actually introduce subtle tints into the images! The above mentioned blog actually did a test to see which filter brands did the best/worst.

    AND - these IR filters are not cheap at $2-300...

    We have lots to learn!

    Stu Aull
    Alaska
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  6. #6  
    Senior Member Trevor Meeks's Avatar
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    I'll be purchasing the Schneider Platinum IRND filters http://www.filmtools.com/schneider-p...d-4x5-650.html
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  7. #7  
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    For us non-Matte box users in Canon-ville:
    the same Schneider Platinum IRNDs in 77mm are here:

    http://www.filmtools.com/schneider-p...irnd-77mm.html

    Stu Aull
    Alaska
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  8. #8  
    Senior Member Terry VerHaar's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by stu aull View Post
    Well there is a damn good thread on this in one of the EPIC/Red Discussion forums:

    http://www.reduser.net/forum/showthr...Filters-Advice

    It seems to be a very worthy discussion that all Scarlet users should be aware of....

    Apparently ALL digital-style cameras are much more sensitive to IR, NOT just RED. (Tho I understand the _original_ ie NON-MX_ RED ONE sensor was particularly sensitive.)
    Where this really comes apparent is when we start to use a lot of ND on our glass, necessary because of the great sensitivity (native 800ISO) of our sensors - most notably in daylight. Here's what mitigates this: as we start stacking NDs (or stronger NDs) onto the lens, it DOES cut down VISIBLE light, but NOT IR! So as we ND-up, the RATIO of IR increases to the point IR starts affecting color, notably in the blacks.

    As I recall, from a great test done on THIS blog;
    http://www.ryanewalters.com/Videos/Tests/tests.html ("Epic, IR tests")
    once you get past about .9 ND (which I'll admit I have NO idea what amount that really is, but presumably a factor indicated ON the filter?) you start to see this pollution problem.

    So the solution? We need to start incorporating IR filtration when using ND.
    And guess what? to make it even MORE complicated/annoying, some IR filters themselves actually introduce subtle tints into the images! The above mentioned blog actually did a test to see which filter brands did the best/worst.

    AND - these IR filters are not cheap at $2-300...

    We have lots to learn!

    Stu Aull
    Alaska
    You explained the problem correctly - when using a lot of ND, the ratio of visible to IR goes up. And .9 ND is 3 stops.
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  9. #9  
    Senior Member Josh Beadle's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by Terry VerHaar View Post
    You explained the problem correctly - when using a lot of ND, the ratio of visible to IR goes up. And .9 ND is 3 stops.
    I believe each .3ND is equal to a stop. So .6 is 2 stops, .9 = 3stops etc
    Josh
    Epic-M 1388 aka "Black Sheep"
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    It's not your camera's fault:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jJm2EGNIod0&feature=related
    "Your first 10,000 photographs are your worst"
    Henri Cartier-Bresson

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  10. #10  
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    I'm wondering about adding a IR-Cut filter BEHIND the lens inside the CANON Mount, so that i can use whatever ND filter i want.
    http://www.edmundoptics.com/products...productid=1524
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