Photo Assignment November '06: Low Light/Nighttime

handicap18

<font color=blue>Husband, father of 3, and Disney
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Oct 18, 2005
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Ok, I dropped the ball last month, but we'll move on from that and get an early start for November's assignment: Low Light and Night time photo's (without using a flash). This seems to be a very popular subject. So we'll get some practice for a month.

Nighttime at Disney is awesome for photo buffs. There are just way to many things to list now. So we'll concentrate on what we can practice on/with. You don't need an expensive dSLR to get good night time or low light photos. However, you do need to know how your camera works and a good tripod or monopod will certainly help.

Since we've recently turned the clocks back here in the States we now get an extra hour of dark to practice our night time shots.

If your new to low light/night time photography then my suggestion is to start with a subject that is not moving. Because there is not much light available you will need to use a slower shutter to capture as much available light possible. This will make any moving subject become blury. In some cases you may want to do this, but in other cases you don't. So keep in mind what you are photographing.

Some ideas:
If you live near a city taking a long exposure of the buildings all light up is good to start. Or any statues or nicely lit buildings in your local town.
Maybe you have a front or back porch that has some nice Halloween decorations, use the outside light and take a picture of that sceen.
One I like is to use the late afternoon light from a window to take a picture of a person or animal without the flash going off.

This is a good opportunity to bump the ISO as high as it can go and see how the results are. Do you get a lot of noise? Can you live the amount of noise the camera has?

P&S users, you have full manual, shutter priority and aperture priority available to you. have you tried using those options? If you were affraid to in the past, this is the time to shed your fears and move that dial. Post your results and ask for help.

dSLR users, have you used the exposure compensation option on your camera?

Do you have a tripod? Maybe you've been wanting to get one, how about now. Use it and learn. Full size tripods, travel size tripods and table top tripods that can fit in your pocket are out there and waiting to be used.

Get out there and take some photos. Experiment and learn how your camera operates. But most of all have FUN!
 
Here are a few of mine to get us started.
Here is one of DS I took a few weeks ago, this is at a playground, they had a big ship the kids could play on, around and in. Inside there wasn't much light at all, thought I try and take a pic:
ISO 800, 1/60th at f/4 with a -1.33 exposure compenstation, handheld. That isn't noise you see, its actually sand in the air that was falling from the kids running around on the upper deck.
DSC_3314.jpg


One of DD in the same boat: This one is a combination of noise and sand you see:
ISO 800, 1/200, f/7.1 -1.67 exposure compensation, handheld.
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And of couse one of my Disney ones from June:
ISO 200, 3 seconds, f/8, tripod used.
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ooooo good assignment considering Halloween is tomorrow night! Betting we will see a few little gobblins and gouls! I'll be handing out candy so I'll have to think of something other low light to shoot!
 
How about a night time pep rally???

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ashley river charleston sc iso200, shutter 1/500 f/14 taken from my 14 story hotel window across the st :goodvibes
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folly beach sc, good thing it was dark on the middle one and i didn't seetill the next day all the bird droppings where i put my chin on the can i set my camera instead of tripod( :crazy2::rolleyes: :rolleyes: :rolleyes: )
 
Oh, GOOD subject. :yay: DH & I were just playing with some shots last night using manual settings. But, I'm gonna work on that more before I post them. ;) Or maybe change subject. Black cat in completely dark room except with just the light from a pellet stove burning on low....might be asking too much for a manual newbie. :rotfl:

For now, here is one from Canon S3, taken in Night Snapshot mode with no flash. Handheld. It was taken very quickly. I'm going to try again handheld & again with a tripod.
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Question on my photo above. Will neon always be a bit blurry? Other parts of the picture look crisper. Will a tripod fix that up a bit or alot? Camera has IS. In real life, the neon lights don't look quite as blurry.
 
These were low light. Could have posted in the pumkin thread, but thought it fit here as well.

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I don't have any pictures to share yet but I was directed here because of an earlier question that I posted. I absolutely love taking pictures but I don't know very much about the manual mode. I'd absolutely love to learn about it. If anyone here has time can they explain to me all of the ISO; F/ stuff? I'm heading home to Saskatchewan tomorrow for my Grandma's funeral :sad: and it is absolutely beautiful there at dusk and at night. Hopefully I get some good pictures. I'll have to remember to post a picture of the castle that I took on our last night back in May. We're right at the end of main street and I turned around and snapped a quick shot of the castle and captured the mass exodus coming towards me. It's a touch blurry but that's alright.

Actually, that brings me to another subject. On my camera (Sony DSC-P93) I have a "beach" type of setting on my dial. It looks like a palm tree and I find if I use it without the flash they don't come out anywhere near as blurry as AUTO without the flash. I'm betting that is because of the higher ISO associated with the setting because if you're shooting a white sand beach that has the sun glaring down on it you're going to want your ISO higher right? Maybe it's not the ISO, maybe it's the shutter speed, I don't know but it works alright.

Keep the great tips coming! Oh yeah (sorry) I just bought a Gorillapod tripod, and it is the greatest thing ever! It is a table-top tripod but each leg is totally flexible (google it!!!) You can attach this guy to door knobs, trees, poles, you name it! I've even had it holding my camera upside down on the vent above the stove so that I could take a picture of myself making my wife's birthday cake!

Sorry, I'm done rambling!
 
Here is one I took of DD on Halloween night. 50mm lens at f/1.8 in aperture priority, ISO 1600 and ended up at 1/40th, I also went a -1/3 on the exposure bias to get a slighty faster shutter. I took about 5 or 6, but most of them had a heavy red hue to them. So I changed the white balance from Auto to Incandescent and got a better result. I'm guessing that the green glow from the night sticks was completely throwing off the auto white balance. If I had more time and thought of it at the time I would have done a pre set white balance with a sheet of paper. Oh well. no biggie.

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SplshMtn99 said:
Question on my photo above. Will neon always be a bit blurry? Other parts of the picture look crisper. Will a tripod fix that up a bit or alot? Camera has IS. In real life, the neon lights don't look quite as blurry.

Yep. A tripod will help with motion blur but it doesn't look like you have any in this photo. Since the lights are significantly brighter than the rest of the scene they get blown out and have a bit of a halo. It's like shooting a light bulb or the sun. They will never look nice and crisp unless you reduce the exposure. As an experiment take several exposures of a room lit by a light bulb. Keep cutting the shutter speed and eventually the bulb will be sharp but the rest of the room will be dark. You can't have both extremes in the same photo. On the up side, it's this quality of night photos that helps make them a little dreamy looking.
 
Low light fireworks - these are sparklers in the garden. Recently bought my Olympus sp500 so I am still learning all that it can do. But so far I love this. I used the fireworks scene setting to take these. let me know what you think.

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And another - my favourite picture so far with this camera - Sunset view from our balcony in St Lucia this summer

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it's been raining the last several days and i didn't get a chance to go anywhere this weekend to shoot. so i took the tripod in the front yard. here is a long exposure: 16 seconds @ 800 - f/4 focussed on the second tree the best that i could (too dark so AF wouldn't work). white balanced against the white car. you can see the wind effect on the tree leaves.
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this next one - i closed up the aperture a tiny bit and increased the exposure to 30 seconds (32 seconds technically). i then went and stepped into the frame for about 12 seconds. it turned out better than i expected.
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THAT'S COOL! You look like a ghost - especially with the black & white effect. That would be a neat thing for some type of Halloween shot. :teeth:
 
yeah - i feel like i should be telling Luke not to give into the dark side...
 
0bli0 said:
yeah - i feel like i should be telling Luke not to give into the dark side...
:rotfl: nice effect though
 
we celebrated my DD's 3rd b'day on sunday. Suze made a 'Sally' cake, per Sevara's request
(she loves 'Cars' and has seen the dvd a zillion times - you should see her do 'Mater' from the 'Ghostlight' short :rotfl2: )

here's what was left....
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handheld indoors at night - ISO 800, f/3.5 @ 1/25 second
 














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