Experiment_626
Stealth Geek
- Joined
- Jul 8, 2008
- Messages
- 1,652
And by catch them, I mean on a sensor or film. No need to call the Ghostbusters.
I've been giving this some thought lately. When I ride the Haunted Mansion, I've had next to no luck at all shooting inside. On a dark ride, I turn off my camera's autofocus-assist light, as leaving it on seems almost as obnoxious as using flash. But the Mansion is probably the darkest dark ride, unless you count thrill rides such as Space Mountain. I can get shots here and there on Pirates of the Caribbean, but not so much on the Haunted Mansion.
Of particular interest are the hicthhiking ghosts. It has crossed my mind that perhaps the best method would be to pre-focus and then shoot like mad when they're visible, hoping you get a shot where the focus is correct.
Does anyone know what focal length is necessary for getting all three ghosts in one shot (with a 1.5x crop factor), and any idea of a usable exposure? I don't mind having to do some post-processing to get a decent shot. My camera is a D300, so 3200 is essentially my highest acceptable ISO. My fastest lens is the 50mm 1.8, which I fear might not be wide enough to get all three ghosts in one shot. For those who have tried it and had any success -- or failures from which you have learned anything useful -- what is needed to get this shot? About how far away are the ghosts when you're able to get a good composition?
SSB
I've been giving this some thought lately. When I ride the Haunted Mansion, I've had next to no luck at all shooting inside. On a dark ride, I turn off my camera's autofocus-assist light, as leaving it on seems almost as obnoxious as using flash. But the Mansion is probably the darkest dark ride, unless you count thrill rides such as Space Mountain. I can get shots here and there on Pirates of the Caribbean, but not so much on the Haunted Mansion.
Of particular interest are the hicthhiking ghosts. It has crossed my mind that perhaps the best method would be to pre-focus and then shoot like mad when they're visible, hoping you get a shot where the focus is correct.
Does anyone know what focal length is necessary for getting all three ghosts in one shot (with a 1.5x crop factor), and any idea of a usable exposure? I don't mind having to do some post-processing to get a decent shot. My camera is a D300, so 3200 is essentially my highest acceptable ISO. My fastest lens is the 50mm 1.8, which I fear might not be wide enough to get all three ghosts in one shot. For those who have tried it and had any success -- or failures from which you have learned anything useful -- what is needed to get this shot? About how far away are the ghosts when you're able to get a good composition?
SSB