Thermal & Night-Vision Video Effects
How real thermal and night-vision cameras work, how a browser filter recreates the look, and the creative ways people use it.
Open the Infrared FilterHow real thermal and night-vision cameras work
Understanding the real devices makes the effect more fun to use. They're actually two completely different technologies:
- Thermal (infrared) imaging detects long-wave infrared radiation — heat — that every object emits. It needs no visible light at all, which is why warm bodies glow against a cool background. The familiar rainbow "heat map" is a false-colour palette applied to invisible temperature data.
- Night vision works in the opposite way: it amplifies the tiny amount of visible and near-infrared light that is present and intensifies it thousands of times. The classic green image comes from the phosphor screen in the eyepiece — green is the colour the human eye distinguishes best at low brightness.
What the filter actually does
A browser can only work with the pixels in the video it's given, so it imitates these looks with standard CSS adjustments:
| Effect | Recipe | Result |
|---|---|---|
| Infrared | Hue rotate ~180°, Saturation 200%, Brightness 110%, Contrast 140% | Colours flip to their opposites and intensify into a surreal heat-map look |
| Night Vision | Strong green tint, Brightness 80%, Contrast 150% | A monochrome-green, high-contrast tactical scope appearance |
The infrared trick relies mostly on the 180° hue rotation: it pushes every colour to the opposite side of the colour wheel, so skin tones and warm areas swing toward cool blues and greens while cool areas turn warm — the visual signature of a thermal map. The heavy saturation and contrast then exaggerate the separation.
Creative ways to use it
- Stream overlays and intros. Toggle the night-vision look on a webcam or gameplay clip for a tactical, "spec-ops" intro.
- Horror and sci-fi aesthetics. The surreal infrared palette instantly makes ordinary footage feel alien or unsettling.
- Music and reaction videos. A quick effect change punctuates a beat drop or a reveal without any editing software.
- Previewing a stylised grade. See whether a clip suits a heavy, inverted look before you commit to recreating it in a real editor.
Because the effect is applied live and is fully reversible, you can flip between the normal image and the effect while the video plays — handy for comparing or for timing the switch to a moment in the footage.
Frequently asked questions
No. It only remaps colours already in the video. A real thermal camera senses infrared radiation an ordinary camera can't capture. This recreates the look for creative use — it doesn't measure temperature or reveal anything new.
Infrared inverts colours and boosts saturation for a vivid heat-map; Night Vision applies a green tint with high contrast for a military-scope feel. One is colourful and surreal, the other monochrome-green and tactical.
Yes — paste a URL from any supported platform and apply the effect. It changes only how the video is displayed in your browser; the source file is untouched and other viewers see the original.
Related: Night mode · Contrast · Brightness