Using a Multispectral Camera in Winter – What Pictures Are Worth Taking?
Winter can feel like the off-season for photography, but for a multispectral camera it’s actually one of the most revealing times of year. With leaves gone, crops dormant, and lower sun angles, winter strips landscapes back to their essentials — making hidden processes easier to see and explain.
Below are some high-value winter subjects that work brilliantly for blogs, lessons, and social posts.
🌲 1. Evergreen vs Deciduous Trees
Winter is perfect for showing biological differences:
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Evergreens still reflect strongly in near-infrared (NIR)
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Deciduous trees show weak or patchy signals
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NDVI-style images clearly separate living vs dormant vegetation
Grass, Moss, and Winter Ground Cover
Life doesn’t stop — it just slows down
Even in January, some plants are quietly active:
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Moss and winter grass often glow in NIR
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Dead grass and leaf litter fall flat
Content Ideas That Work Well in Winter
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“What looks dead but isn’t?”
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Swipe-to-compare images
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Short reels: ‘What my camera sees vs my eyes’
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Before/after frost shots
Final Thought
Winter doesn’t limit multispectral photography — it sharpens it.
With fewer distractions, the camera reveals:
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Who’s still alive
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Where energy goes
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How landscapes really function beneath the surface
Perfect for education, environmental storytelling, and eye-catching science content.
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