UV Photography – seeing a world our eyes were never meant to see
Most of us take photographs of the world as it appears to us. Blue sky, green leaves, slightly muddy sailing gear, and the occasional student who looks as though they would rather be anywhere else. But what if the camera could see something we cannot?
That is where UV photography becomes fascinating.
Ultraviolet photography lets us record light that sits beyond the violet end of the visible spectrum. In other words, it shows us a version of the world that is there all along, but hidden from our eyes. It is a bit like discovering that the garden has been keeping secrets.
The first surprise with UV photography is that familiar things can look completely unfamiliar. Flowers are especially interesting. A bloom that looks plain enough in normal light may suddenly reveal bold patterns in ultraviolet, almost like runway markings for bees. Leaves, petals, skin, fabrics and painted surfaces can all behave very differently under UV. It is as though nature has its own invisible ink.
Of course, this is not quite as simple as pointing any old camera at a daffodil and pressing the button.
Most modern digital cameras are designed specifically not to record ultraviolet light. They have filters over the sensor to block UV and infrared because, for everyday photography, these wavelengths can reduce image quality and produce strange colour casts. So, to do proper UV photography, you usually need a camera that has been modified, or one with a lens and filter setup that allows ultraviolet through while blocking visible light.
And that is where the fun begins. Or the mild financial anxiety, depending on how many accessories you start looking at.
Not all lenses are good for UV work. Many modern lenses contain coatings and glass types that block ultraviolet very effectively. Excellent for ordinary photography, not so helpful when you are trying to photograph the invisible. Older lenses sometimes perform better, and specialist UV-capable lenses perform better still, although your wallet may need a quiet lie down afterwards.
Lighting matters too. Sunlight contains UV, so outdoor photography can work well, but conditions make a difference. Indoors, you may need a UV light source, and you need to do this sensibly and safely. UV is not something to mess about with around eyes or skin. The science is exciting; retinal damage is less so.
One of the great joys of UV photography is that it makes you look again at ordinary things. A white petal is no longer just white. A leaf is no longer just green. Even surfaces that seem dull in visible light may reflect or absorb ultraviolet in dramatic ways. It turns everyday photography into a mixture of science experiment, treasure hunt and detective story.
For someone interested in teaching, science communication, and unusual imaging, UV photography is a gift. It helps show students that light is far more than what we can see. The electromagnetic spectrum stops being an abstract diagram in a textbook and starts becoming something real, practical and slightly magical.
It also reminds us of something important: the world is always richer than it first appears. Cameras, sensors and filters give us tools to peel back those layers, whether in UV, infrared, thermal imaging or microscopy. Every time we do that, we are reminded that “seeing” is not nearly as simple as we think.
So yes, UV photography is technical. Yes, it can involve odd filters, fussy lenses, longer exposures and a certain amount of muttering. But it also opens the door to a hidden world of patterns and structures that are all around us.
And once you have seen a flower in ultraviolet, you may never quite trust it again.