canon powershot ?

tinkabella627

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Aug 3, 2008
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Hey I have a Canon PowerShot SX10 IS. I know it has a fireworks setting and it also has a sport setting. The sport setting takes the rapid pictures (clearly I do not know proper language here, but I am trying to explain the best I know how) and I was wondering if that would work better for fireworks. My camera also tells me when I should raise the flash but the other day at the zoo I did as it todl me to and the pics turned out darker than without the flash. Does anyone know why? Or anything about this camera? Thanks in advance :)
 
For the fireworks shots the setting you use depends upon the type of fireworks shot you want to get. Both the fireworks and sports settings will obtain pictures of fireworks, however people with a similar camera have had better luck with the sports setting obtaining clearer pictures.

See This Thread for more info on Fireworks settings

Now, granted the above link is for the S3/S5 cameras but you just have the latest version of these cameras so the info should still be useful.

I'm not sure what's going on with the flash issue where the image is darker with the flash than without, except that maybe the subject was too far away for the flash to reach it. The flash only has a limited effective range, the info on that should be in the manual that came with your camera. Also, what setting or mode were you using? I know if I happen to be in P or Auto and the shutter is going to be open for very long (more than a fraction of a second) my S5 IS tells me to raise the flash. I can sometimes ignore this warning, but the risk is blurry pictures because of the amount of time the shutter has to be open to try and capture the image. But if I go into Manual I can normally set the ISO high enough that I can increase the shutter speed and get a pretty good picture.

Also, check out the S3/S5 thread you may learn quite a bit about your camera.
 
Both the fireworks and sports settings will obtain pictures of fireworks, however people with a similar camera have had better luck with the sports setting obtaining clearer pictures.

I am sorry, but I have to disagree on that. The sports mode will get shots, but it basically freezes the shot due to a fast shutter speed. You will not get the flowing pics that everyone seems to like so much. IMO, the best mode is manual. Then you set it to a small aperture (larger F number), a shutter of about 2-4 seconds, and then probably an ISO of ~50-100. You can play with the ISO if the shots are either over or under exposed. The key is that you must use a tripod of some sort. Even a tabletop version on a garbage can will do. I do not know if a remote shutter release is available for that model, but that would also help. If not, use the two second delay to keep you pressing the shutter from causing blur.
 
Hey I have a Canon PowerShot SX10 IS. I know it has a fireworks setting and it also has a sport setting. The sport setting takes the rapid pictures (clearly I do not know proper language here, but I am trying to explain the best I know how) and I was wondering if that would work better for fireworks. My camera also tells me when I should raise the flash but the other day at the zoo I did as it todl me to and the pics turned out darker than without the flash. Does anyone know why? Or anything about this camera? Thanks in advance :)

The camera tells you to raise the flash when it's determining that it cannot take a picture and get sufficient light to properly expose the subject or when it senses that the shutter speed would be too slow without camera shake.

You have to determine whether the shutter speed is appropriate for the situation your in and if a flash will help. If you are shooting things with that 20x zoom then the flash likely won't help much. The range is fairly short and your pictures will end up underexposed. However, if you don't use the flash you will likely need 1/2-1 second exposure times in very dim light and you'll get camera shake without a tripod.
 

Regarding your first question regarding fireworks mode vs sports mode for shooting fireworks:

The key to a nice photograph of fireworks is capturing the entire blast, so it looks like a big, bright chrysanthemum flower in the sky. A fireworks blast is nothing more then several balls of bright light radiating from the center of an explosion in the sky. As those balls radiate from the center of the blast, our eyes perceive them as trails of light. In order for the camera to capture those flying balls as long trails of light it needs to use a long exposure, aka a slow shutter speed. In other words, the camera's "eye" needs to stay open for at least a whole second or more. The problem with such slow shutter speeds is that the camera needs to be perfectly still, or else the entire picture will be blurry. When I say perfectly still, I mean perfectly still, as in using a tripod. It's impossible to hand-hold a camera perfectly still. A hair's breath of motion, imperceivable to us, will cause blurry pictures at slow shutter speeds. The fireworks setting of your camera uses a slow shutter speed, so you need to stablize the camera by using a tripod or by using the camera's auto timer feature and setting it on the top of a trash can or something stable.

The sports setting of the camera uses a fast shutter speed. That mode is intended for freezing fast action in bright daylight. Because of the fast shutter speed, hand-holding the camera doesn't result in blurry images. However, when the sports setting is used on fireworks, it freezes the motion of the fireworks blast, resulting in an image of bright stationary dots in the sky, rather than the long beautiful trails of light that you'd prefer. So, when hand-holding the camera you'll get sharper pictures in sports mode, but your pictures of fireworks will suck. The better option is to use fireworks mode and a tripod (or some other way of stabilizing the camera).

Regarding your second issue:

Flash is generally only effective on subjects within 10 feet of the camera. When you take a flash photograph, the camera may think that the subject is within 10 feet and that it wrongly assumes that the subject will be properly exposed by the amount of light the flash it emits. That's why the images come out dark. When you take a picture without flash the camera knows that it can't rely on adding light to the scene, so it resors to using a slower shutter speed or a larger aperture (it opens its "eye" wider) to capture more light. That's why some pictures with flash appear to be darker than images taken without flash. However, indoor images without flash can be blurry because of the slow shutter speed.

Additionally, if you're using flash and the subject is within 10 feet of the camera. it's possible that the flash correctly exposes the person, but everything else in the room is very dark...it looks like the person is standing in a cave. Again, that's because the flash is limited in its effect on the rest of the room which is farther away than the person.
 
Thank you all so much... I am going to have to go look at my camera now and see if I can figure out what you are all telling me now! Not that I have any fireworks to test it on but I gotta see if I even know where all these buttons are!
 












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