Alaska 2

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Normal light and infra-red photographs of the beautiful landscape and wildlife in Alaska.


Photos selected from set by https://x.com/Marsagenesis.

8 responses to “Alaska 2”

  1. Alexey Tolchinsky Avatar
    Alexey Tolchinsky

    gorgeous

  2. Amit Avatar
    Amit

    A raw and humbling glimpse into earth’s primordial beauty.. thanks 🙂

  3. Marcelo Avatar
    Marcelo

    Michael, these are great! Where did you take them (roughly which parks/locations in Alaska?) and how did you do the IR shots?

    1. Mike Levin Avatar
      Mike Levin

      thanks; Juneau, Ketchikan, Skagway, inside passage basically. As for the IR, I used a Sony Alpha 6000 camera modified by Kolari to shoot in NIR. Their process removed an IR filter from the camera’s sensor and also requires one of several filters on the front of the camera, for example IRChrome gallery or CandyChrome gallery. More examples here: https://thoughtforms.life/infrared-photography-2/

      1. Marcelo Avatar
        Marcelo

        Fantastic, thank you!

  4. Philip Lambert Avatar

    Just stunning, what more can one say?

    And another nudge for me to get that new camera and delve into the details and the theories-of-camera and the story-telling of photography and film.

    Thanks again for posting,

  5. ZK Avatar
    ZK

    super love >>> ORDER UPON ORDER >>>>>

    What am I upon this vessel—
    not my vessel,
    but this glazed lapis world
    adrift in the hush between signals?
    They say
    this is the eyelet of the cosmos—
    the crowning clasp.
    Its heart:
    a convulsing crucible of molten spin,
    electro-tide, iron breath.
    Around it:
    burnt umber,
    knotted in neural thread—
    root-snare and loam-song.
    Then quartz.
    Then bloom.
    Then brine.
    This flickering dot
    pinwheels within a roiling gyre—
    gyre upon gyre—
    ink-laced, light-laced,
    swept in galactic script
    beside others,
    billions,
    all tugged by clockless forces—
    ratio upon ratio—
    gilded calculus in scatter.
    Look:
    the pattern
    writhes in the pupil
    too wide to name,
    too fine to flee.
    And the thought—
    not thought,
    but pulse—
    tightens the breath,
    sieves the chest,
    an ache beneath language.

  6. Jim Avatar
    Jim

    Wonderful and Inspiring

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