Invisible Light

Infrared photography captured with a full-spectrum modified camera across multiple wavelengths – primarily 590nm false color, 720nm color infrared, and 830nm black and white. Vegetation reflects infrared light invisible to human vision, rendering summer foliage as luminous whites, pinks, and surreal blues depending on the filter wavelength used. This creates dramatic tonal inversions: bright skies turn dark, green trees become white or pastel, and the familiar landscape transforms into something alien.

Subjects span Northern California and Nevada locations – rural landscapes, agricultural fields, lone trees, water reflections, old structures, and high desert terrain. The collection includes both the dreamlike false color work (blue skies, pink/white trees) and high-contrast monochrome infrared that emphasizes clouds, vegetation structure, and stark graphic compositions. Infrared reveals atmospheric haze, highlights cloud detail invisible in normal photography, and creates the signature “Wood Effect” glow in foliage.

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