photo:night
Table of Contents
urban night photography
see also:
introduction
- photographing urban city lights adds an extra bonus to your travel photography
- shooting about 10-25 minutes after sunset will give your cloudless sky a nice deep blue
- shooting when the full moon is up and behind you will help to fill in the shadows a bit
use a tripod
- for best image quality, you need a sturdy tripod, lowest ISO, medium apertures (eg. f/8) for adequate sharpness and depth of field (DOF), and this results in long exposures such as:
- ISO 200, f/8, 10-20 seconds
- you should consider bracketing your exposures +/- 0.5 EV, of you can do a full HDR bracket (eg. 3 shot +/- 1EV, 5 shot +/- 2EV in total)
- make sure you have focus on infinity if you have no important close subjects, otherwise consider focusing on the hyperfocal distance for that set up.
if you don't have a tripod
- if you are lucky enough to have a Olympus OM-D E-M5 camera with a Olympus m.ZD 12mm f/2.0 lens then you CAN get reasonable wide angle hand held shots at the following settings
- ISO 800, f/2.0 and 1/4 second with the 5EV image stabiliser activated
- you may be able to do a very carefully held 1/2 second and 1/8th second shot for HDR work as well
- if you have a full frame dSLR with a 24mm f/1.4 lens, you are going to have trouble as you will need:
- ISO 3200, f/1.4 and ~1/30sec - it is possible but very shallow DOF which will be very annoying, and you will need to hold it very steady.
- note that unlike mirrorless camera systems, dSLRs have mirror lock up to contend with:
- Mirror lock-up can drastically increase sharpness for exposure times comparable to the settling time of the mirror (~1/30 to 2 seconds)
photo/night.txt · Last modified: 2018/01/01 11:59 by gary1