The boys celebrated the New Year by playing with fire for a while last night. It was a little early for New Years (about 7:30), but we don't stay up very late around here. Here are some of my pictures of the event:
The shots were taken at ISO 200 using bulb mode and an aperture around f/4 to f/5.6. For light, I shot through a ring flash in a shoot-thru softbox.
If I had it to do again, I'd change up some things. First, I'd find a darker area to shoot. The XMas lights in the background are a distraction. The extra ambient light from the streetlamps and other lights increases the "ghosting" of the kids.
I'd use speedlights instead of the Alien Bees. I couldn't figure out how to trigger the Bees with a second curtain sync (firing when I close the shutter rather than when I open it). I'd also move the light away from the camera. I'd probably put one flash on either side of me angled back toward the middle.
Given the amount of smoke, I'd opt to do this on a windy night. It wasn't too bad last night, but several shots were really hurt by smoke when the wind died down.
If I really wanted good fireworks shots, I'd have used adults as subjects. I wanted to let the kids have fun, so I didn't push too hard on them. Still, they couldn't even master the basic concepts of looking towards the camera. What you really want is someone that can invision what the long exposure shot of their movements will look like and not paint across their face, make interesting designs (from the perspective of the camera), etc.
For type of shooting I'm thinking of, the ideal fireworks generate little smoke (paper free sparklers worked better than the paper wrapped ones) and aren't too bright (smaller sparklers are better than thicker ones). Brighter objects create more problems with subject ghosting.
I'm considering doing another shoot in the future in front of a black paper background (we'll keep lots of water handy, just in case), with a fan to help drive away smoke, and some creative adults or older kids.
The rest of the pictures can be seen on my Smugmug site
here.