a friend of mine told me this doest work daw, dugay naman daw ni nga balita and ang lense dugay na daw na gi stop production.. sayang.. pero if idea really work i wanna see it in live action.. homer palit na sa camera ug sa lense.. kuyog ta ayala!
a friend of mine told me this doest work daw, dugay naman daw ni nga balita and ang lense dugay na daw na gi stop production.. sayang.. pero if idea really work i wanna see it in live action.. homer palit na sa camera ug sa lense.. kuyog ta ayala!
muhahaa pero murag lisod sa ayala kay aircon, masnindot sa mga outdoor, mas mu epictibo daw if close-range, direct from sun light ang target and in nightmode ang cameraOriginally Posted by EarlZ
so aha man ta ani mag shoot sa atong movies?
hehehe... ayay.. chicks chicks!
sa carbon market og sa mga tsanggehan kay init man ngadto.Originally Posted by koto
hehehe... puro mani mga man*akis mga tao dri oi... ayala lang para daghan lami.. hehehe
Originally Posted by Chipmunk888
next thing would be... X-Ray sun glasses... A MUST HAVE!!!![]()
oh yeah... hehehehe para lapos lapos ang panan-aw
naa naman daghang pics na "XRAY" on the net, using this setup... dugay na kay ni, naa na gani gi pahase out ang sony na video cams because this feature was being used for peeping.... this works best on bikinis, etc... you can find a lot of bikini xray shots on the net if you're resourceful enough...
from http://forum.dvdtalk.com/archive/ind.../t-217180.html :
The way it is done is simple. CCD imaging sensors are normally very sensitive to near-infrared energy. Because of this sensitivity, an unfiltered outdoor CCD image looks strange. Foilage is washed out to grey and the color detail is lost due to excess IR energy from the sun.
Camera manufacturers add a filter to remove this IR energy. This fliter appears clear to the visible eye, but is opaque at infrared frequencies and therefore removes the IR light. This helps correct the image colors and reduces washout.
Now if this infrared filter is removed and an infrared pass filter (appears opaque to the visible eye, like the window on the end of many remote controls) is added to the lens, you have a camera that is sensitive to infrared light and blocks visible light. This is what the infamous Sony NightVision camera does.
Some materials pass IR energy more easily than visible light energy. Many synthetic materials, such as nylon or lyrca, exhibit this property. Hence the see-through bikini but the opaque cotton t-shirt. It takes a lot of energy to penetrate these materials, so most "x-ray" pictures will be taken outdoor with the sun as a huge IR floodlight.
The easiest way to build your own IR camera is to find a B/W CCD security camera (even those little cameras sold for $30 shouldl work) remove the glued-on IR block filter, then tape an IR pass filter or the darkest red lighting gel you can find on the lens.
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