jaapv
RFF Sponsoring Member.
A very good UV camera as well, the M8:
B&W 403 filter, Iso 640. 1/30th Summarit 1.5/50 @ 4.0
Newer lenses don't transmit UV, so it was this one or a Jupiter. Focussing was a lot more accurate than I expected, just the other way around from IR photography, but the Summarit has a surprisingly small deviation and infinity is infinity. I bracketed focus.
B&W 403 filter, Iso 640. 1/30th Summarit 1.5/50 @ 4.0
Newer lenses don't transmit UV, so it was this one or a Jupiter. Focussing was a lot more accurate than I expected, just the other way around from IR photography, but the Summarit has a surprisingly small deviation and infinity is infinity. I bracketed focus.

schmoozit
Schmoozit good...
When I saw your thread title I figured it had to be a new series by Memphis.
jaapv
RFF Sponsoring Member.
Brian Sweeney said:Very nice results.
How do the results from the M8 compare with film?
I would not know; I've never done UV on film. As a matter of fact this is my first UV shot ever.
kds315
www.macrolenses.de
Jaap,
congrats for your start to explore a completely new world only a few made it up to now!! The reflection of the skye, the flat lying gravestones indeed IS reflected UV. But this pic you shot could also contain quite some IR and you would not even know it since the filter you used leaks substantially IR (the grass + leaves tree color indicate that btw. A real UV image looks nearly monochrome). Here the graph about the nearly identical Schott Ug1 filter:
To be on the safe side you could use the Baader 2" U-filter (ca. EUR220) and repeat the test, then we would know (this filter has IR completely suppressed):
Cheers, Klaus
(here is my UV site with filter/lens tests and real results: http://www.pbase.com/kds315
congrats for your start to explore a completely new world only a few made it up to now!! The reflection of the skye, the flat lying gravestones indeed IS reflected UV. But this pic you shot could also contain quite some IR and you would not even know it since the filter you used leaks substantially IR (the grass + leaves tree color indicate that btw. A real UV image looks nearly monochrome). Here the graph about the nearly identical Schott Ug1 filter:

To be on the safe side you could use the Baader 2" U-filter (ca. EUR220) and repeat the test, then we would know (this filter has IR completely suppressed):

Cheers, Klaus
(here is my UV site with filter/lens tests and real results: http://www.pbase.com/kds315
Last edited:
kds315
www.macrolenses.de
Brian Sweeney said:Film's sensitivity extends fairly deep into UV, should go past the cover glass of a CCD.
You're right Brian, a CCD does max some 300..350nm whereas film (esp. b/w film) goes at least to 250nm
Cheers, Klaus
kds315
www.macrolenses.de
These are some landscape UV images shot in 300..400nm UV window using the Baader 2" U-filter (I call it UG11xx since it is based on Schott Ug11 with 100layer dichroic overcoating)
and a flower (deep red rose) would look like that for instance:


and a flower (deep red rose) would look like that for instance:

Last edited:
Share: