Infrared panorama over Hong Kong taken from Victoria Peak.

My Gateway to Infrared

By Jonathan Murray

My introduction to infrared photography—both the inspiration and the activation—began in Hong Kong several decades ago. Infrared photography is a fascination that has stayed with me ever since, tracking alongside the generational leaps in digital photography over the last thirty years.

In 1989, I made my first trip to China to install computer systems in support of the Hainan Gas development project. The work itself happened near Shenzhen in the PRC, but Hong Kong was the stepping stone, the place where every journey into China truly began.

As a kid, I grew up with an almost mythical view of Hong Kong. In the mid-seventies, when we moved to Cyprus, we found ourselves in the middle of a British expat community, and many of them had lived in Hong Kong. I listened to their stories—this improbable city-state with its polyglot energy, its collision of British formality and Chinese dynamism, its neon heartbeat. By the time I finally visited in my mid-twenties, the place lived up to all of it. It was a transformative experience.

Infrared view of Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument.
Infrared view of Kasha-Katuwe Tent Rocks National Monument.

Hong Kong became a frequent port of call over the next few decades, and my visits always included a pilgrimage to the photography stores of Mong Kok along Nathan Road. Those stores were temples of photographic innovation, carrying Japanese gear often before it would ship in the United States—and at prices that made your wallet sing. On one of those visits, in late 1999, I walked out with a brand-new Contax 645 and a trio of Zeiss lenses.

I shot extensively with the Contax, almost entirely on Velvia 50 and 100, until 2003 when Kodak bestowed upon the world the 16-megapixel DCS Pro Back 645C. I’d already dipped a toe into early digital, but this was end-game technology at the time. High-resolution digital, married to the Contax and Zeiss glass, felt like alchemy. Even today, I’d argue that this unique combination of glass, CCD, pixel pitch, color fidelity, and sheer resolving power would still hold its own.

Infrared view of cottonwood tress over path at El Rancho de Las Golondrinas museum, Santa Fe, NM.
Infrared view of cottonwood tress over path at El Rancho de Las Golondrinas museum, Santa Fe, NM.

But the DCS Pro Back 645C—and specifically that model—had a trick up its sleeve. Its IR hot mirror could be safely removed by the user, without risk of damaging the camera. Paired with the inherrent infrared sensitivity of CCD sensors, it became an absolute monster for IR work. Even with an R72 filter on the lens, the sensitivity was nearly identical to daylight capture. It was a revelation.

And that’s how my journey into the world of infrared truly began. I never looked back.

Infrared view from hidden kiva overlooking Canyonlands National Park.
Infrared view from hidden kiva overlooking Canyonlands National Park.

In the years since, I’ve owned full-spectrum conversions of Nikon DSLRs, Phase One backs, Sony mirrorless bodies, and most recently my original Hasselblad X2D after upgrading to the X2D 2. Being able to shoot 100-megapixel IR files is extraordinary—but part of me still yearns for that original pairing of Contax and Kodak.

Letting go of my DCS Pro Back 645C is one of my great photographic regrets. I still have my Contax 645, but 645Cs are rarer than hen’s teeth these days. If you happen to know of someone looking to part with theirs, please let me know. I’d happily bring one back home.

Infrared view of lone tree on hill side at Canyonlands National Park.

Infrared has always felt like a form of seeing beneath the surface—a way of revealing something the everyday eye can’t quite grasp. Maybe that’s why it stayed with me. Every time I shoot IR, I’m reminded of those early days: wandering the neon noise of Mong Kok, unboxing that Contax in a Hong Kong hotel room, and later pulling the IR filter from the Kodak back for the very first time. It felt like discovering a hidden layer of the world.

Three decades on, IR still gives me that same sense of discovery. Cameras have changed, resolutions have soared, and sensors behave differently, but the magic remains. Maybe that’s why I still pine for the old Kodak—because it wasn’t just a tool. It was the gateway, the catalyst that opened a path I’ve been following ever since.

And the truth is, I’m still following it. IR keeps teaching me new ways to see, to interpret, to pay attention. It reminds me that the world has more layers than we notice—and that sometimes the most interesting stories begin when you look beyond what the visible spectrum is willing to give you.

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About The Author

By Jonathan Murray
I'm a technology strategist by trade and semi-professional photographer by passion. Those two worlds come together with my deep interest in the technical aspects of film photography, videography and audio production. I'm fascinated by how advances in these areas expand opportunities for creative expression. My wife and I are digital nomads, spending eight months a year traveling and documenting the diversity of the United States.
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Comments

Gabriele Coassin on My Gateway to Infrared

Comment posted: 31/12/2025

How wonderful!
It takes me back to my crazy experiments with infrared photography, both black and white and color, in the mid-1970s.
When I first saw Minor White's IR work, a world of beauty opened up to me, which I find here in these super-wide photos by Jonathan Murray. The reference to digital infrared is very interesting. But I remain attached to film photography, even though it's cumbersome and slow at every step to achieve the final work.
Thanks again for this beautiful summary and stunning images!
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Jonathan Murray replied:

Comment posted: 31/12/2025

Thank you Gabriele for the very kind words. I’m glad these brought back good memories for you. I get your point about film vs digital but with such a limited selection of IR film stocks these days digital for me is the easiest path. Wishing you a peaceful and productive new year.

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Eric Rose on My Gateway to Infrared

Comment posted: 31/12/2025

Finally someone who actually uses IR artistically and not just to show off the IR effect. I love your images!
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Jonathan Murray replied:

Comment posted: 31/12/2025

Eric. Thank you I appreciate the kind words. Wishing you all the best for 2026.

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Neal Wellons on My Gateway to Infrared

Comment posted: 31/12/2025

Great photography. I especially like your gateway photo and cottonwood trees. You are an inspiration to photographers who may be considering infrared.

In additional to digital (I shot with an adapted FujiX100s), i shot IR with many film cameras before mostly settling on a Holga 120 with 720nm filter. I love it too and hope this article adds more converts to a really fun and rewarding genre.
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Jonathan Murray replied:

Comment posted: 31/12/2025

Thank you Neal. I appreciate the kind words. The cottonwood tunnel image was a favorite of my old mentor Bruce Dale. I hope the images do inspire folks to try IR. It’s just another “brush” in my view. Like trying acrylics if you’ve always been a watercolorist. It’s always great to see the world from a different perspective. Wishing you a happy New Year!

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Dave Powell on My Gateway to Infrared

Comment posted: 31/12/2025

Just gorgeous images Jonathan! They demonstrate that IR is more than just a "niche" technique. It can be a high-end tool for exhibit-quality B/W art. Wonderful work!!!
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Jonathan Murray replied:

Comment posted: 31/12/2025

Dave. Thank you very much for the kind words. Much appreciated. I agree completely that when used as a creative technique, rather than and end in itself, IR really does extend our photographic horizons. Wishing you all the best for 2026.

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Art Meripol on My Gateway to Infrared

Comment posted: 01/01/2026

Spectacular and inspiring images. So much more to these than many IR shots. So much more thought planning and effort as the results show.
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Jonathan Murray replied:

Comment posted: 01/01/2026

Art. Thank you very much for your kind words. Wishing you a great 2026.

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Simon Foale on My Gateway to Infrared

Comment posted: 01/01/2026

Wow those are all really inspiring images Jonathan. I have shot three or four IR films (with the R72 filter) now and really love the results. I am hoping to find the time to shoot some more of it. But the digital avenue definitely sounds tempting.
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Jonathan Murray replied:

Comment posted: 01/01/2026

Simon - Thank you very much. I know that shooting IR film needs to be on my list for 2026. All the best for 2026.

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Alexandre Kreisman on My Gateway to Infrared

Comment posted: 01/01/2026

Dear Jonathan,

Beautiful and for me story telling pictures, a great body of work!
I am fortunate to possess an M9 Monochrom, which coupled with an IR filter gives me beautiful images the few times I'm wandering in nature.
However, I have 18Mpx and you shoot at 100 !? Thus my question is why do you need so much resolution ?
Cheers and happy shooting!
Alex
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Jonathan Murray replied:

Comment posted: 01/01/2026

Alexandre - Thank you very much for the kind words. The M9M is such a wonderful camera for IR. As I mentioned the post, all of the images were shot with the Kodak DCS Pro Back 645C which had a 16Mpx square sensor. The M9 and the Kodak share a lot of DNA of course with them both being CCD based sensors. I do shoot with 100Mpx Hasselblads today for both color, B&W and IR work. More Mpx is always helpful for my commercial work. My wife - a travel writer - and I just completed an 18 month project documenting 100 of America's official scenic byways. We delivered the manuscript and photography to the publisher back in September. The book layout is now being finalized and the publisher asked for additional photography for 15 two page spread section dividers. I now need to go back into my catalog and find images to fit and I'm going to have to find crops from portrait images that can work as horizontal two page spreads. Having 100Mpx to play with makes that a much easier request to satisfy.

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Alexandre Kreisman replied:

Comment posted: 01/01/2026

Thank you Jonathan, it makes sense in that perspective indeed! I miss the ccd sensor

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Alexander Seidler on My Gateway to Infrared

Comment posted: 02/01/2026

Great Photos Jonathan !
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Jonathan Murray replied:

Comment posted: 02/01/2026

Thank you very much!

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Omar Tibi on My Gateway to Infrared

Comment posted: 03/01/2026

Beautiful shots and great story to accompany them, thanks a lot Jonathan. I'm actually interested in trying out some IR photography of my own, on film. I'm interested, is there anything that inspires your choice of subject in IR? Do you seek certain elements, like plants for the Wood Effect?

Happy shooting in 2026!
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Jonathan Murray replied:

Comment posted: 03/01/2026

Omar - Thank you very much. I need to caveat my answer to your question. I am just not a very analytical or methodical photographer. My approach is almost always intuitive - does the scene feel right? Eric Rose's comment above I think hits the nail on the head. Above all would the composition work as a good photograph without the IR elements? I think that's generally true of the images I ahed in the post. If you took the IR away they would still be serviceable - not necessarily great - images. In my view IR is used to accentuate a composition which already feels intuitively correct. Of all the images above, the lone tree at Canyonlands National Park is one of my favorites for this reason. The IR effect is a tiny element of the photo but its impact in accentuating the tree against a wall of sandstone cliffs is what makes the images for me. Wishing you good shooting in 2026.

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