Helen B
Member
Roger, in digital, the blue is blue and IR sensitive, the green is green and IR sensitive and the red is red + IR. In film, the blue is blue + green, the green is blue + red, and the red is IR.
I'm not sure how you would accomplish this feat in digital then, due to the sensitivity SHIFT in analog. Oh, you might approach it in PS, but nothing like in film. It would take massive manipulation in PS to do it which defeats the purpose of just clicking a shutter with analog.
PE
PE,
Taking Roger's post one step further:
With false-colour film you normally use a yellow filter to restrict the blue+IR sensitive layer (which ends up as a red image) to just IR (or very near IR to be more precise). If you did the same with digital, then you would have IR, green+IR and red+IR. It is a trivial matter to turn that into IR, green and red channels, and you can assign any colour you wish to any channel - such as red for the IR channel, blue for the green channel and green for the red channel (to mimic EIR's false colours). This is not 'massive manipulation' by any means. Furthermore, you could use other filters or combinations of filters to produce any combination of three channels from five bands (very near UV, blue, green, red and very near IR).
For those who don't already know, EIR has the following false colour effect:
Blue + IR sensitive layer, forming a red image;
Blue + green sensitive layer, forming a blue image;
Blue + red sensitive layer, forming a green image.
Best,
Helen