Photography needs light. The process of using a sensor (whether drawing, digital or chemical) to capture lights reflections and refraction's is something that human have attempted throughout the ages. The use of light, the way it reflects and it's properties is something that humans are drawn to.
Which Color Theory is Best to Use? As photography is concerned with the action of light, it is easiest to concentrate on using RGB as the primary colors. While there are differences between the relationships of the color in this and the YRB primaries, they both use colors in the same basic order on their respective color wheels. So neither is necessarily best to use, just more convenient.The only thing between the light that has passed through the Aperture and the image sensor is a shutter. The Shutter Speed setting controls how long the shutter opens to expose the image sensor to that light. Open it for just a millisecond and you can freeze a fast moving subject. Alternatively, you can show the movement of a fast moving subject by keeping it open longer with a slow shutter speed.
Light sources Light sources are crucial in infrared photography. Your choice of light source can have a big effect on the pictures you take.
Sunlight As a light source, the sun is the primary source of infrared light. It emits visible light, infrared light and ultraviolet light.
The Dutch astronomer Huygens proposed a wave theory of light. He believed that light was a longitudinal wave, and that this wave was spread through a material called the aether. Since light can pass through a vacuum and travels very fast Huygens had to propose some rather strange properties for the aether: for example; it must fill all space and be weightless and invisible.
To take this picture i tired to keep the room really dark and made sure that there isn't any natural light coming through. I also tried to make sure that the denominator of the shutter speed is quite low so around 1/20 or 1/30. I did this so that while the picture is being taken i was writing the word, but i had to keep repeating the word a few times to get it perfect.