MarkBarbieri
Semi-retired
- Joined
- Aug 20, 2006
- Messages
- 6,172
Our neighborhood put on a candlelight Christmas program last night. People sang carols, there was a brief nativity play, and the kids played with their candles. Fire seems to be popular with boys.
I made an effort to take pictures of the event. Taking pictures of a crowd of people in the dark using candles for light isn't as easy as I hoped, even with the 5DM2.
I shot between ISO 1600 and ISO 6400. I used my Canon 24-70 f/2.8 and my Canon 70-200 f/2.8. Everything was shot on a tripod. All (or almost all) shots were taken wide open. The shutter speeds varied from 1/2 to 1/200 with most between 1/15 and 1/30. Most of the pictures were garbage. Noise, subject movement, extreme dynamic range, and challenging compositions overwhelmed my abilities.
I used my flash to help out. Obviously, a standard flash photo of someone holding a candle is going to ruin the candle effect. I used an orange gel over the flash to warm the light. I still had problems with flash power. At first, I set the camera to -2 stop flash exposure compensation. Unhappy with the look, I switched the flash to manual mode and dialed it to minimum power (1/128). That was still too bright. Finally, I switched to the longer lens and flipped down the flash diffuser. That made the flash cover and extremely wide angle (14mm equivalent), so the amount of flash on my subject (shooting between 70mm and 200mm) was pretty small. It was enough to help out but not enough to overpower. In hindsight, once I'd worked out the trick to forcing down the effective power of the flash by increasing the coverage area, I should have switched back to E-TTL -2. Instead, I just left it on manual. Shooting with the flash in the dark gave me a better appreciation of why they now let you control the flash through the camera's menu. I'm still more comfortable with the old fashion buttons on the flash, so I used them instead.
I did most of my post processing in photoshop because of the availability of better noise reduction. The photos were so bad that I really needed the extra control of PS over Lightroom. I did do basic work in Lightroom (crops, pimple healing, basic exposure). I also used it for vignetting. With so many of my subjects being surrounded by other distracting people, I used the vignetting to draw more attention to my subject.
Looking back at the pictures, I can also see that I had a problem with centered-subjects. I did a lot of shooting with the center focus point active because it was hard to get the focus lock I wanted shooting into a crowd in extreme low light. The problem was that I would often forget to recompose and so I was left with an awkwardly centered subject. Hopefully it makes some newbies feel better to know that someone that has been shooting for 20 years still makes stupid rookie mistakes on a regular basis.
The slideshow is here. The pictures are here. Below are some samples. As bad as they look, these are among the better shots. If you have any advice on how to better shoot something like this, I'd love to hear suggestions.
I made an effort to take pictures of the event. Taking pictures of a crowd of people in the dark using candles for light isn't as easy as I hoped, even with the 5DM2.
I shot between ISO 1600 and ISO 6400. I used my Canon 24-70 f/2.8 and my Canon 70-200 f/2.8. Everything was shot on a tripod. All (or almost all) shots were taken wide open. The shutter speeds varied from 1/2 to 1/200 with most between 1/15 and 1/30. Most of the pictures were garbage. Noise, subject movement, extreme dynamic range, and challenging compositions overwhelmed my abilities.
I used my flash to help out. Obviously, a standard flash photo of someone holding a candle is going to ruin the candle effect. I used an orange gel over the flash to warm the light. I still had problems with flash power. At first, I set the camera to -2 stop flash exposure compensation. Unhappy with the look, I switched the flash to manual mode and dialed it to minimum power (1/128). That was still too bright. Finally, I switched to the longer lens and flipped down the flash diffuser. That made the flash cover and extremely wide angle (14mm equivalent), so the amount of flash on my subject (shooting between 70mm and 200mm) was pretty small. It was enough to help out but not enough to overpower. In hindsight, once I'd worked out the trick to forcing down the effective power of the flash by increasing the coverage area, I should have switched back to E-TTL -2. Instead, I just left it on manual. Shooting with the flash in the dark gave me a better appreciation of why they now let you control the flash through the camera's menu. I'm still more comfortable with the old fashion buttons on the flash, so I used them instead.
I did most of my post processing in photoshop because of the availability of better noise reduction. The photos were so bad that I really needed the extra control of PS over Lightroom. I did do basic work in Lightroom (crops, pimple healing, basic exposure). I also used it for vignetting. With so many of my subjects being surrounded by other distracting people, I used the vignetting to draw more attention to my subject.
Looking back at the pictures, I can also see that I had a problem with centered-subjects. I did a lot of shooting with the center focus point active because it was hard to get the focus lock I wanted shooting into a crowd in extreme low light. The problem was that I would often forget to recompose and so I was left with an awkwardly centered subject. Hopefully it makes some newbies feel better to know that someone that has been shooting for 20 years still makes stupid rookie mistakes on a regular basis.
The slideshow is here. The pictures are here. Below are some samples. As bad as they look, these are among the better shots. If you have any advice on how to better shoot something like this, I'd love to hear suggestions.










