Obtaining Proper Exposure When Shooting Infrared Landscapes

by | Jul 7, 2023

Today’s Post by Joe Farace

“Landscape is to American painting what sex and psychoanalysis are to the American novel.” ― Robert Hughes

Digital infrared photographs render landscapes as if they were glowing, moonlit or immersed in an extraterrestrial light because of the nearly white reproduction of most vegetation’s chlorophyll. That’s the good news. The bad news is that exposure meters, either hand held or in-camera, are not sensitive to infrared light.

All that makes it difficult to calculate exact exposures when shooting infrared either when using on-camera filters or when shooting with an IR-converted camera, as was the case with the featured image below. For example, two subjects that appear equally bright under normal, visible light might reflect infrared radiation at significantly different rates and have different brightness when captured with an IR-converted camera or infrared filters.

How I made this shot: I photographed my favorite tree in McCabe Meadows in infrared using a Lumix G6 that had been converted by LifePixel using their Enhanced Color IR Filter (equivalent to 665nm filter.) Yes, I have a favorite tree, not a favorite species and I’m not sure what species this tree is other than it’s old and has an interesting shape. (My friend Barry Staver says it’s a cottonwood.) Lens was the Lumix G Vario 12-32mm f/3.5-5.6 at 12mm with an exposure of 1/400 sec at f/11 and ISP 400.

The Panasonic Lumix G6 that I used to make the above photograph it tends to slightly underexpose when shooting landscape image like this one, even though the image on the LCD may look perfect. And because they are based on a visible light spectrum, histograms aren’t always a good indication either.

When just getting started in digital IR photography it’s a good idea to bracket three to five different exposures because you can’t count on your LCD screen to show you the exact result when viewing the files on your computer’s calibrated monitor.

Most cameras offer a built-in bracketing function but even if your camera doesn’t have a bracket function it should have an Exposure Compensation control that will let you adjust exposures on one-half or one-third stops while in the various automatic exposure modes. After you get more experience you will learn what you have to add (and probably not subtract, but you never know until you try.)  I almost always have to add PLUS one- or two-thirds stop exposure compensation to images shot with this camera.

And that is always why, when shooting infrared, I will often shoot in manual mode. You don’t need a hand held exposure meter to get started shooting in manual mode.  I typically look through the lens with the camera set in Program mode and see what the suggested exposure is, then transfer that shutter speed and aperture to the camera after switching to manual mode. You are now free to change shutter speed or aperture just like in the good ole days.


I’ve found that Life Pixel does a great job with IR conversions and they’ve done most of the conversions for some of my Canon DSLRs and all of my Panasonic Lumix G-series cameras. This is not a paid or sponsored endorsement, just my experience.

My book, The Complete Guide to Digital Infrared Photography is available from Amazon with new copies available for $10 and used copies selling for around three bucks as I write this. Creative Digital Monochrome Effects has a chapter on IR photography and is available from Amazon new for $5.95 with used copies starting at $4.00.